

Review: Beautiful edition. - A proper and neatly packaged product by the seller, kudos to them(Trans Infopreneur Inc) Review: He redefines our tenet - I was introduced to Stefan Zweig six decades ago , and he shares the stage with O. Henry till today.






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| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 1,853 Reviews |
A**3
Beautiful edition.
A proper and neatly packaged product by the seller, kudos to them(Trans Infopreneur Inc)
A**M
He redefines our tenet
I was introduced to Stefan Zweig six decades ago , and he shares the stage with O. Henry till today.
A**N
One of the Most Intense Novels I've Ever Read
Not only for myself, Stefan Zweig is being discovered all over again by readers worldwide. He was a bestseller and widely read German writer in his own time, but sank into oblivion (rather forced to) due to his self imposed exile to avoid nazi nuisance and later his sudden, shocking demise by suicide. But thanks to Pushkin Press, Zweig is getting re-discovered again, his time of oblivion is over for good. There is another standard translation of Beware of Pity published by Penguin titled "Impatience of the Heart". (Another one is there by Rupa Publication, too. But I don't know much about that.) But in my humble opinion the one translated by Anthea Bell (Pushkin Press edition) is more definitive than the Penguin version. Coming to the novel itself, this is nothing but a masterpiece. An original and powerful exploration of human emotions. A tense, feverish, exciting tale structured with gripping intensity. Sunday Telegraph advices in their review of the book that "you should go out at once and buy his books". I couldn't agree more.
D**V
One of the main front page of the book is missing
The main highlight, the main front of the book is not printed–where it is written about two types of pity, except from this book quality is pretty good, one can purchase if you don't get into much details about books
S**K
Very fine
Superb
N**P
Don't pity, instead, genuinely respect!
Such a brilliant book. Very heartbreaking. It really shows the consequences of pity - an unwarranted response to another - a form of condescension. The characters are beautifully developed and they evoke strong emotions. The unique writing style also adds great value to the reading. Definitely a must-read.
R**A
Learnt the real meaning of Pity and will always be ware of it now.
I got this book as a gift from a friend returning from Vienna (Austria), I rather forced him to get me one. Now all my friends know that the moment they ask me what to get from the country they are returning, it will never be something from Duty Free, but from the airport book stall, but the only condition is that it has to be a local author book and in English. I neither offer them a writer's name nor a book, so it always comes as a surprise. This was a totally surprise read with so much human psychology in play that it shocked, surprised and kept me engaged to the very last page with such an intriguing story, yet it took me close to two weeks to finish, but no complaints. The story is very straightforward and told from the perspective of a highly decorated army officer who had personally shot down three fighter aircraft in the Second World War and had kept an enemy army at bay with his histrionics of machine guns and all that. How his little act of pity lands him in a soup is the story all about when he mistakenly asks a crippled girl to dance with him just because he was invited to a high-end party, where, in the first place, he was in awe of one of her close friends. What leads is an amazing story where we, the readers, feel his pain and angst as he goes through and how it all technically gets forced on him with no way out for him. At times, I myself was confused as to who was rooting for? the crippled girl falling for the officer, or her father blackmailing him with his power or our hero’s pure heart making him do something his brain tells him all the way not to do. But what shocked and broke my heart was the ending, hats off to Stefan Zweig for that ending that I simply couldn’t predict, yet he leaves me with a few questions, which are food for my thoughts on the gem of a story. The title is so apt that mid-way ways I just couldn’t think of a better alternate option. Have you read Beware of Pity or any other Stefan Zweig book? I am looking forward to a few more from him as they are much more acclaimed than this one. Also, my next foreign gift book is going to be from Shakespeare, guess where my friend is coming back from?
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