
Nachbarn Erzählungen von Hermann Hesse
S. Fischer Verlag, Berlin, 1909, contains 317 pages + 2 pages of ads for 3 other Hesse books
Bound in the original pictorial blind-stamped cloth
"1909" on title page and "Published, October 15, 1908" on copyright page, along with "Copyright 1908 by S. Fischer , Verlag, Berlin" hand stamped in blue ink on copyright page, so as to correct the "1909" on title-page (no other listed copies contain with this point of issue). I believe this to be a the True 1st Germain Edition of Hermann Hesse's short stories Nachbarn : Erzählungen , however I am unable to find reference material to confirm this.
An EARLY and RARE original Germain edition of Hesse's short stories!
Condition: Very Good-, Staining on rear cover (interior is not effected), head and tail of spine are rubbed, binding is sound, some light ghost marks from erased penciled writing on title-page and rear endpaper
Hermann Hesse (pronounced [ˈhɛʀman ˈhɛsə]) (2 July 1877 – 9 August 1962) was a German-Swiss poet, novelist, and painter. In 1946, he received the Nobel Prize in Literature. His best-known works include Steppenwolf, Siddhartha, and The Glass Bead Game (also known as Magister Ludi) which explore an individual's search for authenticity, self-knowledge and spirituality.
Life
Youth
Hesse was born in the Black Forest town of Calw in Württemberg, Germany to a Christian missionary family. Both of his parents served with a Basel Mission to India, where Hesse's mother Marie Gundert was born in 1842. Hesse's father, Johannes Hesse, was born in 1847 in Estonia,
the son of a doctor. The Hesse family had lived in Calw since 1873,
where they operated a missionary publishing house under the direction
of Hesse's grandfather, Hermann Gundert.
Hesse spent his first years of life surrounded by the spirit of Swabian piety. In 1881, when Hesse was four, the family moved to Basel, Switzerland, for six years, then returned to Calw. After successful attendance at the Latin School in Göppingen, Hesse began to attend the Evangelical Theological Seminary in Maulbronn
in 1891. Here in March 1892, Hesse showed his rebellious character and
in one instance he fled from the Seminary and was found in a field a
day later.
During this time, Hesse began a journey through various institutions
and schools, and experienced intense conflicts with his parents. In
May, after an attempt at suicide, he spent time at an institution in Bad Boll under the care of theologian and minister Christoph Friedrich Blumhardt. Later he was placed in a mental institution in Stetten im Remstal, and then a boys' institution in Basel.
Hesse's birthplace in Calw, 1977
At the end of 1892, he attended the Gymnasium in Cannstatt. In 1893, he passed the One Year Examination, which concluded his schooling.
After this, Hesse began a bookshop apprenticeship in Esslingen am Neckar,
but after three days he left. Then in the early summer of 1894, he
began a fourteen month mechanic apprenticeship at a clock tower factory
in Calw. The monotony of soldering and filing work made him resolve to
turn himself toward more spiritual activities. In October 1895, he was
ready to begin wholeheartedly a new apprenticeship with a bookseller inTübingen. This experience from his youth he returns to later in his novel, Beneath the Wheel.
Becoming a writer
On 17 October 1895, Hesse began working in the bookshop Heckenhauer
in Tübingen, which had a specialized collection in theology, philology,
and law. Hesse's assignment there consisted of organizing, packing, and
archiving the books. After the end of each twelve hour workday, Hesse
pursued his own work further, and he spent his long, idle Sundays with
books rather than friends. Hesse studied theological writings, and
later Goethe, Lessing, Schiller, and several texts on Greek mythology. In 1896, his poem 'Madonna' appeared in a Viennese periodical.
By 1898, Hesse had a respectable income that enabled his financial
independence from his parents. During this time, he concentrated on the
works of the German Romantics, including much of the work from Clemens Brentano, Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff, Friedrich Holderlin and Novalis. In letters to his parents, he expressed a belief that "the morality of artists is replaced by aesthetics."
In the fall, Hesse released his first small volume of poetry, Romantic Songs and in the summer of 1899, a collection of prose, entitled One Hour After Midnight . Both works were a business failure. In two years, only 54 of the 600 printed copies of Romantic Songs were sold, and One Hour After Midnight received only one printing and sold sluggishly. Nevertheless, the Leipzig publisher Eugen Diederichs
was convinced of the literary quality of the work and from the
beginning regarded the publications more as encouragement of a young
author than as profitable business.
Beginning in the fall of 1899, Hesse worked in a distinguished
antique book shop in Basel. There through family contacts he stayed
with the intellectual families of Basel. In this environment with rich
stimuli for his pursuits, he further developed spiritually and
artistically. At the same time, Basel offered the solitary Hesse many
opportunities for withdrawal into a private life of artistic
self-exploration through journeys and wanderings. In 1900, Hesse was
exempted from compulsory military service due to an eye condition. This, along with nerve disorders and persistent headaches, affected him his entire life.
"Modern Book Printing" from the Walk of Ideas in Berlin, Germany - built in 2006 to commemorate Johannes Gutenberg's invention, c. 1445, of movable printing type.
In 1901, Hesse undertook to fulfill a grand dream and travelled for
the first time to Italy. In the same year, Hesse changed jobs and began
working at the antiquarium Wattenwyl in Basel. Hesse had more
opportunities to release poems and small literary texts to journals.
These publications now provided honorariums. Shortly the publisher Samuel Fischer became interested in Hesse, and with the novel Peter Camenzind,
which appeared first as a pre-publication in 1903 and then as a regular
printing by Fischer in 1904, came a breakthrough: From now on, Hesse
could live as a free author.
Between Lake Constance and India
With the literary fame, Hesse married Maria Bernoulli (of the famous family of mathematicians[2]) in 1904, settled down with her in Gaienhofen on Lake Constance, and began a family, eventually having three sons. In Gaienhofen, he wrote his second novel Beneath the Wheel, which was published in 1906. In the following time he composed primarily short stories and poems. His next novel, Gertrude, published in 1910, revealed a production crisis—he had to struggle through writing it, and he later would describe it as "a miscarriage."
Hesse's writing desk, pictured at the Museum Gaienhofen
Gaienhofen was also the place where Hesse's interest in Buddhism was resparked. After a letter to Kapff in 1895 entitled Nirvana, Hesse's Buddhist references were no longer alluded to in his works. This was rekindled, however, in 1904 when Arthur Schopenhauer and his philosophical ideas started receiving attention again, and Hesse discovered theosophy.
Schopenhauer and theosophy are what renewed Hesse's interest in India.
Although 1904 was many years before the publication of Hesse's Siddhartha (1922), this masterpiece was derived from these new influences.
During this time, there also was increased dissonance between him and Maria, and in 1911, Hesse left alone for a long trip to Sri Lanka and Indonesia.
Any spiritual or religious inspiration that he was looking for eluded
him, but the journey made a strong impression on his literary work.
Following Hesse's return, the family moved to Bern in 1912, but the change of environment could not solve the marriage problems, as he himself confessed in his novel Rosshalde from 1914.
The First World War
At the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, Hesse registered himself as a volunteer with the Imperial army,
saying that he could not sit inactively by a warm fireplace while other
young authors were dying on the front. He was found unfit for combat
duty, but was assigned to service involving the care of war prisoners. [3]
On 3 November 1914, in the Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Hesse's essay "O Friends, Not These Tones" ("O Freunde, nicht diese Töne")[4] appeared, in which he appealed to German intellectuals not to fall for patriotism.
What followed from this, Hesse later indicated, was a great turning
point in his life: For the first time he found himself in the middle of
a serious political conflict, attacked by the German press, the
recipient of hate mail, and distanced from old friends. He did receive
continued support from his friend Theodor Heuss, and the French writer Romain Rolland, whom Hesse visited in August 1915.
This public controversy was not yet resolved, when a deeper life
crisis befell Hesse with the death of his father on 8 March 1916, the
difficult sickness of his son Martin, and his wife's schizophrenia. He was forced to leave his military service and begin receiving psychotherapy. This began for Hesse a long preoccupation with psychoanalysis, through which he came to know Carl Jung
personally, and was challenged to new creative heights: During a
three-week period during September and October 1917, Hesse penned his
novel Demian, which would be published following the armistice in 1919 under the pseudonym Emil Sinclair. (Emil Sinclair was a friend of the German Romantic poet Novalis, who was an influence on Hesse).
Casa Camuzzi
When Hesse returned to civilian life in 1919, his marriage was shattered. His wife had a severe outbreak of psychosis,
but even after her recovery, Hesse saw no possible future with her.
Their home in Bern was divided, and Hesse resettled alone in the middle
of April in Ticino,
where he occupied a small farm house near Minusio (close to Locarno),
and later lived from 25 April to 11 May in Sorengo. On 11 May, he moved
to the town Montagnola and rented four small rooms in a strange castle-like building, the 'Casa Camuzzi'.
Here he explored his writing projects further; he began to paint, an activity which is reflected in his next major story Klingsor's Last Summer, published in 1920. In 1922, Hesse's novel Siddhartha appeared, which showed the love for Indian culture and Buddhist
philosophy, which had already developed at his parents' house. In 1924,
Hesse married the singer Ruth Wenger, the daughter of the Swiss writer Lisa Wenger and aunt of Meret Oppenheim. This marriage never attained any true stability, however.
In 1923, Hesse received Swiss citizenship. His next major works, Kurgast (1925) and The Nuremberg Trip (1927), were autobiographical narratives with ironic undertones, and foreshadowed Hesse's following novel, Steppenwolf, which was published in 1927. In the year of his 50th birthday, the first biography of Hesse appeared, written by his friend Hugo Ball. Shortly after his new successful novel, he turned away from the solitude of Steppenwolf and married art historian Ninon Dolbin, née Ausländer. This change to companionship was reflected in the novel Narcissus and Goldmund, appearing in 1930.
In 1931, Hesse left the Casa Camuzzi and moved with Ninon to a large house (Casa Hesse) near Montagnola, which was built according to his wishes.
The Glass Bead Game
In 1931, Hesse began planning what would become his last major work, The Glass Bead Game (aka Magister Ludi). In 1932 as a preliminary study, he released the novella, Journey to the East. The Glass Bead Game was printed in 1943 in Switzerland. For this work, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1946.
Later life
Hesse observed the rise to power of Nazism in Germany with concern. In 1933, Bertolt Brecht and Thomas Mann made their travels into exile, and in both cases, were aided by Hesse. In this way, Hesse attempted to work against Hitler's suppression of art and literature that protested Nazi ideology.
Hesse, who had long published pieces in German journals and
newspapers, spoke publicly in support of Jewish artists and others
pursued by the Nazis.[citation needed] However, when he wrote for the Frankfurter Zeitung, he was accused of supporting the Nazis, whom Hesse did not openly oppose.
From the end of the 1930s, German journals stopped publishing Hesse's work, and his work was eventually banned by the Nazis.
The Glass Bead Game was Hesse's last novel. During the last
twenty years of his life Hesse wrote many short stories (chiefly
recollections of his childhood) and poems (frequently with nature as
their theme). Hesse wrote ironic essays about his alienation from
writing (for instance, the mock autobiographies: Life Story Briefly Told and Aus den Briefwechseln eines Dichters) and spent much time pursuing his interest in watercolors.
Hesse also occupied himself with the steady stream of letters he
received as a result of the prize and as a new generation of German
readers explored his work. In one essay, Hesse reflected wryly on his
lifelong failure to acquire a talent for idleness and speculated that
his average daily correspondence was in excess of 150 pages. He died on
9 August 1962 and was buried in the cemetery at San Abbondio in
Montagnola, where Hugo Ball is also buried.
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1900-Present
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