Tonio Kröger 
ich stehe zwischen zwei welten, bin in keiner daheim und habe es infolge dessen [sic!] ein wenig schwer. read this in german, translation in the english edition according to goodreads: i stand between two worlds. i am at home in neither, and i suffer in consequence.had to read this for school and probably wouldnt have done so otherwise because it isnt really my cup of tea and what i enjoy reading in my free time. the characters were dull and the lack of plot got tedious after a while. i still
That was very cool. I like it so much, I wish that, this story should be more longer

In his speech during the Nobel award ceremony, Thomas Mann said about "Tonio Kröger": Als junger Mensch habe ich eine Erzählung geschrieben, die immernoch jungen Menschen wohlgefällt, den Tonio Kröger. Sie handelt vom Süden und vom Norden und von der Mischung beider in einer Person: einer konfliktvollen und produktiven Mischung. Der Süden, das ist in dieser Geschichte der Inbegriff alles geistig-sinnlichen Abenteuers, der kalten Leidenschaft des Künstlertums; der Norden dagegen der Inbegriff
There is an echo through the works of great authors: they repeat theirselves on and on. Sometimes profoundly, others not that deep, their writings frequently surround the same themes.It's not different in this novel. Tonio Kroeger pre-announces some of Mann's greatests concerns to be better developed later in his short stories and romances. The passage of time, solitude, the artist's exile from reality and maybe even homossexuality are some of what we'll find here as Mann introduces us to Tonio
Read this if you aspire to be an artist, to take that cold fruitless demeanor and slather it with an artless endeavor for the life, for the bright ones who dance in three-fourths, if you long for your same parents and for perhaps a degradation or uplifting of humanity within yourself.
The author presents us with gusto, in this very short novel, typical moments of ideals by existential growth of a bourgeois artist named Tonio Kröger.The latter, tossed by the winds and tides where the boat of his existence bathes, faces his anguish, preserving as best he can the unstable equilibrium of his sensitive soul.He takes both reflection and immediacy seriously, persisting almost heroically in keeping them both in existential tension, instead of unifying them into a comfortable gloom.
Thomas Mann
Paperback | Pages: 67 pages Rating: 3.73 | 5491 Users | 226 Reviews

Identify Books Supposing Tonio Kröger
Original Title: | Tonio Kröger |
ISBN: | 185399345X (ISBN13: 9781853993459) |
Edition Language: | English |
Commentary To Books Tonio Kröger
A title in the Bristol Classical Press German Texts series, in German with English notes, vocabulary and introduction. Thomas Mann (1875-1955), was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1929, and "Tonio Kroger" occupies a central position in his spiritual and artistic development. A study of youth, it draws together many strands of his life and work: the duality of his parentage; his abhorrence of discipline; and the influence of Schopenhauer and Wagner on his early phase of writing.Details Epithetical Books Tonio Kröger
Title | : | Tonio Kröger |
Author | : | Thomas Mann |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | First Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 67 pages |
Published | : | April 1st 2013 by Bristol Classical Press (first published 1903) |
Categories | : | European Literature. German Literature. Classics. Fiction. Cultural. Germany. Literature |
Rating Epithetical Books Tonio Kröger
Ratings: 3.73 From 5491 Users | 226 ReviewsEvaluation Epithetical Books Tonio Kröger
Tonio Kröger is the first work that I read of Mann's world. I am glad I did. An autobiographical novel in which profound, artistic and literary character of Thomas Mann is demonstrated in the form of unaccepted loves, first in his childhood (Hans Hansen) and second in his adolescence (Ingeborg Holm), both blondes with blue eyes who could never understand the melancholic, poetic face of an artist. As he grows up, in his thirty, Tonio Kröger who is now a great literary writer rediscovers hisich stehe zwischen zwei welten, bin in keiner daheim und habe es infolge dessen [sic!] ein wenig schwer. read this in german, translation in the english edition according to goodreads: i stand between two worlds. i am at home in neither, and i suffer in consequence.had to read this for school and probably wouldnt have done so otherwise because it isnt really my cup of tea and what i enjoy reading in my free time. the characters were dull and the lack of plot got tedious after a while. i still
That was very cool. I like it so much, I wish that, this story should be more longer

In his speech during the Nobel award ceremony, Thomas Mann said about "Tonio Kröger": Als junger Mensch habe ich eine Erzählung geschrieben, die immernoch jungen Menschen wohlgefällt, den Tonio Kröger. Sie handelt vom Süden und vom Norden und von der Mischung beider in einer Person: einer konfliktvollen und produktiven Mischung. Der Süden, das ist in dieser Geschichte der Inbegriff alles geistig-sinnlichen Abenteuers, der kalten Leidenschaft des Künstlertums; der Norden dagegen der Inbegriff
There is an echo through the works of great authors: they repeat theirselves on and on. Sometimes profoundly, others not that deep, their writings frequently surround the same themes.It's not different in this novel. Tonio Kroeger pre-announces some of Mann's greatests concerns to be better developed later in his short stories and romances. The passage of time, solitude, the artist's exile from reality and maybe even homossexuality are some of what we'll find here as Mann introduces us to Tonio
Read this if you aspire to be an artist, to take that cold fruitless demeanor and slather it with an artless endeavor for the life, for the bright ones who dance in three-fourths, if you long for your same parents and for perhaps a degradation or uplifting of humanity within yourself.
The author presents us with gusto, in this very short novel, typical moments of ideals by existential growth of a bourgeois artist named Tonio Kröger.The latter, tossed by the winds and tides where the boat of his existence bathes, faces his anguish, preserving as best he can the unstable equilibrium of his sensitive soul.He takes both reflection and immediacy seriously, persisting almost heroically in keeping them both in existential tension, instead of unifying them into a comfortable gloom.
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