An edition of The Habsburg twilight (1979)

The Habsburg twilight

tales from Vienna

1st American ed.
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Last edited by ImportBot
April 17, 2024 | History
An edition of The Habsburg twilight (1979)

The Habsburg twilight

tales from Vienna

1st American ed.
  • 0 Ratings
  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

Sarah Gainham, for decades a celebrated European correspondent for the London Spectator during the post WWII years, and the author of Night Falls on the City and other novels of Vienna, writes authoritatively about the last decades of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, with the perceptiveness and knowledge of that lost civilisation. She recalls eight major characters of Viennese history, from the tragic Crown Prince Rudolf who committed suicide with his young mistress, to the great composer and head of the Vienna Opera Gustav Mahler, the woman who founded the fabled Hotel Sacher, the celebrated journalist Theodor Herzl, founder of the Zionist movement, or Karl Lueger, the populist Mayor of Vienna whose stridency and amazing successes with the masses recall today's Donald Trump.

As the Kirkus Review writes, "Gainham believes that the notion of the Austro-Hungarian Empire's long and irreversible decline was a rationale later thought up by politicians to explain the Central European disasters after 1919". The Empire she describes, under the reformer emperor Franz-Josef, widower of the celebrated Sissi, "was a vital and going concern, a society that attempted to implement universal manhood suffrage before any other major European power, a monarchy that permitted an unusual degree of social mobility, and, finally, a multinational state with tremendous cultural energy".

In her eight sketches of famous personalities from the Empire's last decades, Gainham highlights unusual facts about her subjects' lives and recreates the feel of the glittering, cosmopolitan Imperial Austria.In her lively account, "Franz Joseph," Kirkus Review points out, "was no martinet, but a shy and uncertain man (at least in private matters), neither cold nor humorless, but himself deeply in love with two women--his wife and Katharina Schratt, one of Vienna's foremost actresses. Gustav Mahler was a living embodiment of a career carved by talent--a man who rose from grandchild of a ragpicker to emperor of the Imperial Opera."

Gainham handles details authoritatively, with a great elegance of writing. Her portraits of Herzl, Klimt, and Karl Lueger are discerning, the tale of Anna Sacher and the Hotel Sacher is "a delight". When you have finished her book, you feel you have been allowed a glimpse of a vanished past as well as the understanding of an essential European era.

Publish Date
Publisher
Atheneum
Language
English
Pages
242

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: The Habsburg twilight
The Habsburg twilight: tales from Vienna
1979, Atheneum
in English - 1st American ed.
Cover of: The Habsburg twilight
The Habsburg twilight: tales from Vienna
1979, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, Orion Publishing Group, Limited
in English

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Book Details


Published in

New York

Edition Notes

Includes index.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
943.6/13
Library of Congress
DB851 .G3 1979

The Physical Object

Pagination
242 p., [8] leaves of plates :
Number of pages
242

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL4750814M
Internet Archive
habsburgtwilight00gain
ISBN 10
0689109571
LCCN
78073085
OCLC/WorldCat
4592628
Library Thing
30799
Goodreads
1657920

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History

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April 17, 2024 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
June 17, 2023 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
February 13, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot remove fake subjects
April 11, 2016 Edited by Clemence de Roch Edited without comment.
December 10, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page