
The Royal Game: With Letter From An Unknown Woman And Amok
Condition remarks:
Book: Fair
Jacket: Wear and tear
Pages: Tanning and foxing
Markings: Previous owner
This masterful collection of novellas by Stefan Zweig presents three of the Austrian author's most celebrated works of psychological fiction, each a taut and penetrating study of obsession, passion, and the extremes of human emotion. The Royal Game chronicles the harrowing mental ordeal of a man imprisoned in solitary confinement by the Gestapo, who preserves his sanity by replaying chess matches in his mind — only to find that the game has consumed him entirely. Letter from an Unknown Woman uncovers a lifetime of silent, unrequited devotion through the posthumous confession of a woman who loved a man who never truly saw her, rendered with an aching, lyrical intensity that lingers long after the final page. Amok details the psychological unraveling of a colonial doctor in Southeast Asia, driven to a state of feverish madness by a single, fateful encounter with a desperate woman. Written with Zweig's signature precision and empathetic insight, these three works illustrate his unparalleled ability to illuminate the hidden interior lives of ordinary people caught in the grip of extraordinary, all-consuming forces.
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Description
Condition remarks:
Book: Fair
Jacket: Wear and tear
Pages: Tanning and foxing
Markings: Previous owner
This masterful collection of novellas by Stefan Zweig presents three of the Austrian author's most celebrated works of psychological fiction, each a taut and penetrating study of obsession, passion, and the extremes of human emotion. The Royal Game chronicles the harrowing mental ordeal of a man imprisoned in solitary confinement by the Gestapo, who preserves his sanity by replaying chess matches in his mind — only to find that the game has consumed him entirely. Letter from an Unknown Woman uncovers a lifetime of silent, unrequited devotion through the posthumous confession of a woman who loved a man who never truly saw her, rendered with an aching, lyrical intensity that lingers long after the final page. Amok details the psychological unraveling of a colonial doctor in Southeast Asia, driven to a state of feverish madness by a single, fateful encounter with a desperate woman. Written with Zweig's signature precision and empathetic insight, these three works illustrate his unparalleled ability to illuminate the hidden interior lives of ordinary people caught in the grip of extraordinary, all-consuming forces.












