STEPPENWOLF, A NOVEL BY HERMANN HESSE (BOOK REVIEW AND RECOMMENDATION)
In this post, I shall review Steppenwolf, a well known novel by German-Swiss author Herman Hesse. Steppenwolf was the tenth novel published by Hesse and it remains one of his most popular works. Originally published (as Der Steppenwolf) in 1927 in Germany, it was translated to English two years later.
I read this novel years ago. It was not my first work by Hesse. I remember liking it, but not as much as some of Hesse's other works. When I prepare my book reviews, I often reread either part of the book or entire books. I like rereading and I enjoy a chance to compare my impressions.
The novel opens with a preface that is seventeen pages long. Only once the preface is over, does the real book (or book withing a book) begin. In a way, the preface introduces us to the first person narration. In fact, the book itself is presented in the preface as a manuscript written by Harry. Apparently Harry leaves it to a chance acquaintance, the nephew of his landlady and it is this nephew who writes the preface and explain all of this.
PREFACE
THIS BOOK CONTAINS THE RECORDS LEFT US by a man whom, according to the expression he often used himself, we called the Steppenwolf. Whether this manuscript needs any introductory remarks may be open to question. I, however, feel the need of adding a few pages to those of the Steppenwolf in which I try to record my recollections of him. What I know of him is little enough. Indeed, of his past life and origins I know nothing at all. Yet the impression left by his personality has remained, in spite of all, a deep and sympathetic one. Some years ago the Steppenwolf, who was then approaching fifty, called on my aunt to inquire for a furnished room. He took the attic room on the top floor and the bedroom next it, returned a day or two later with two trunks and a big case of books and stayed nine or ten months with us.
He lived by himself very quietly, and but for the fact that our bedrooms were next door to each other—which occasioned a good many chance encounters on the stairs and in the passage—we should have remained practically unacquainted. For he was not a sociable man. Indeed, he was unsociable to a degree I had never before experienced in anybody. He was, in fact, as he called himself, a real wolf of the Steppes, a strange, wild, shy—very shy—being from another world than mine. How deep the loneliness into which his life had drifted on account of his disposition and destiny and how consciously he accepted this loneliness as his destiny, I certainly did not know until I read the records he left behind him.
Despite the fact that Harry is very shy and withdraw, the nephew manages to sort of befriend him. At any rate, they establish a connection of some kind. The nephew describes Harry as seeming genuine and intelligent.
Yet, before that, from our occasional talks and encounters, I became gradually acquainted with him, and I found that the portrait in his records was in substantial agreement with the paler and less complete one that our personal acquaintance had given me. By chance I was there at the very moment when the Steppenwolf entered our house for the first time and became my aunt's lodger. He came at noon. The table had not been cleared and I still had half an hour before going back to the office. I have never forgotten the odd and very conflicting impressions he made on me at this first encounter. He came through the glazed door, having just rung the bell, and my aunt asked him in the dim light of the hall what he wanted. The Steppenwolf, however, first threw up his sharp, closely cropped head and sniffed around nervously before he either made any answer or announced his name. "Oh, it smells good here," he said, and at that he smiled and my aunt smiled too. For my part, I found this matter of introducing himself ridiculous and was not favorably impressed. "However," said he, "I've come about the room you have to let." I did not get a good look at him until we were all three on our way up to the top floor. Though not very big, he had the bearing of a big man. He wore a fashionable and comfortable winter overcoat and he was well, though carelessly, dressed, clean-shaven, and his cropped head showed here and there a streak of grey. He carried himself in a way I did not at all like at first. There was something weary and undecided about it that did not go with his keen and striking profile nor with the tone of his voice. Later, I found out that his health was poor and that walking tired him. With a peculiar smile—at that time equally unpleasant to me—he contemplated the stairs, the walls, and windows, and the tall old cupboards on the staircase. All this seemed to please and at the same time to amuse him. Altogether he gave the impression of having come out of an alien world, from another continent perhaps. He found it all very charming and a little odd. I cannot deny that he was polite, even friendly. He agreed at once and without objection to the terms for lodging and breakfast and so forth, and yet about the whole man there was a foreign and, as I chose to think, disagreeable or hostile atmosphere. He took the room and the bedroom too, listened attentively and amiably to all he was told about the heating, the water, the service and the rules of the household, agreed to everything, offered at once to pay a sum in advance— and yet he seemed at the same time to be outside it all, to find it comic to be doing as he did and not to take it seriously. It was as though it were a very odd and new experience for him, occupied as he was with quite other concerns, to be renting a room and talking to people in German. Such more or less was my impression, and it would certainly not have been a good one if it had not been revised and corrected by many small instances. Above all, his face pleased me from the first, in spite of the foreign air it had. It was a rather original face and perhaps a sad one, but alert, thoughtful, strongly marked and highly intellectual. And then, to reconcile me further, there was his polite and friendly manner, which though it seemed to cost him some pains, was all the same quite without pretension; on the contrary, there was something almost touching, imploring in it. The explanation of it I found later, but it disposed me at once in his favor.
This acquaintance (the nephew) who was in favour of Harry, is the one who finds Harry's manuscript, writes and adds a short preface of his own and then has the manuscript published. Once the long preface is over, we learn the actual title of the book is then: Harry Haller's Records (For Madmen Only).
Thus the story of Harry begins and we learn even more about him. It's not exactly a warm story. The very first sentence contains the word 'kill'.
THE DAY HAD GONE BY JUST AS DAYS GO BY. I had killed it in accordance with my primitive and retiring way of life. I had worked for an hour or two and perused the pages of old books. I had had pains for two hours, as elderly people do. I had taken a powder and been very glad when the pains consented to disappear. I had lain in a hot bath and absorbed its kindly warmth. Three times the mail had come with undesired letters and circulars to look through. I had done my breathing exercises, but found it convenient today to omit the thought exercises. I had been for an hour's walk and seen the loveliest feathery cloud patterns penciled against the sky. That was very delightful. So was the reading of the old books. So was the lying in the warm bath. But, taken all in all, it had not been exactly a day of rapture. No, it had not even been a day brightened with happiness and joy. Rather, it had been just one of those days which for a long while now had fallen to my lot; the moderately pleasant, the wholly bearable and tolerable, lukewarm days of a discontented middle-aged man; days without special pains, without special cares, without particular worry, without despair; days when I calmly wonder, objective and fearless, whether it isn't time to follow the example of Adalbert Stifter and have an accident while shaving.
Harry reflects on himself and the world, he often concludes he is not suited for the world and society.
While wondering the city, Harry encounters a person carrying an ad for a magic theatre. This person gives Harry a small book, Treatise on the Steppenwolf. Parts of this book are printed in the novel. Harry tries to find this theatre. Thus, the novel truly begins.
If I recall well my original review, I wasn't exactly impressed with this novel. In other words, I liked it but I didn't love it. I found some new things to appreciate in rereading, but I still have other Hesse's favourites. This is a profound piece of writing, there's no doubt about that. However, it's not my personal favourite.
“There is no reality except the one contained within us. That is why so many people live such an unreal life. They take the images outside of them for reality and never allow the world within to assert itself.”
Possibly, my main issue with this book is that it was too similar to other Hesse's work I've read. Had this been the first Hesse's novel I've read, I'm sure that I would have been head over heels with it, but so it happens that it wasn't. It was my third novel by Hesse and for me personally, Steppenwolf and its theme of an isolated intellectual/misanthropist didn't move me that much. It might bee because I felt like I had heard it all before.
While I was reading Steppenwolf, I had this deja vu sensation, a feeling that I have had already read all of it (heard all those life lessons), absorbed them from Hesse's other works.
Therefore, I found it challenging to fully immerse myself into the story. At least that is what I kept telling myself. Maybe this book demands more concentration than I gave it. Maybe it just isn't my preferred Hesse.
Gracias por la reseña. Es otra obra de este autor que tengo pendiente. Te mando un beso. Me gusta tu atuendo. Te mando un beso.
ReplyDeleteMuchas gracias por la reseña y por recordarnos este extraordinario libro. Y es que Hermann Hesse fue un escritor grandioso.
ReplyDeleteOh, it does sound like a man in misery. I like the idea that Harry is shy. Perhaps it is a book about every man. Recently, I found Bony M's Steppenwolf song. And it is a cool song, yet not nearly as iconic as Daddy Cool. Thanks so much for this review. Oh, love the photos too. Such a great outfit and the sweet white walls dotted with some wonderful artwork. All the best to your creativity! Thanks again for reading and your comments. All the best to your travels and inspirations.
ReplyDeleteI may have to look for this novel. I like that you do know Hesse so well and the way he writes. Such a fabulous review. Thanks so much! Oh, and some awesome photos of you! Such a great black suit! Perfect for this review! Thank you for your comments. Thank you for reading. All the best to your reading list and your creative adventures.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your suggestion about the writer and the novel. Beautiful pictures of you Ivana 😀
ReplyDeleteYet another one I've read when I was much younger. I don't remember whether I actually loved it or not. He's just one of the authors who were fashionable among the angst-ridden youth back in the day! xxx
ReplyDeleteThe photos are amazing!
ReplyDeleteMi piaci molto con il secondo look Ivana stai benissimo
ReplyDeleteI've never read any of Herman Hesse's work. I don't think I would be very interested in the story of an isolated intellectual/misanthropist though from your review, it sounds like Siddhartha would be a better book to start with.
ReplyDelete"Steppenwolf" is indeed a thought-provoking novel that delves deep into the human psyche and existential questions. You look lovely in that suit.
ReplyDeleteHello Ivana!
ReplyDeleteIt's a pity you didn't read that book in the first place, so you felt a kind of frustration at having already emerged into Hesse's world. As I read on I realise your dilemma when you feel identified with the protagonist and how it bothers you and you feel the need to read and read again!!! I don't like seeing you in such dark colours, but maybe it's to do with how you feel about this book that definitely bothers you!
Looking very chic in black, Ivana. I haven't read anything but Hermann Hesse, it sounds a bit too heavy-going for my taste. The only Steppenwolf I'm familiar with is the rock band who sung Born to be Wild in Easy Rider. Now I know where the name came from! xxx
ReplyDeleteI read that book several years ago and I had the same feeling, I felt that it was not a fluid reading, rather deep feelings at times it seemed melancholic, but at the end of the day it conveys a little of the writer's feelings, by the way I loved your look and this beautiful heels.
ReplyDeleteHermann Hesse is indeed a complex and thought-provoking novel. www.melodyjacob.com
ReplyDeleteHvala ti na sjajnoj recenziji, a moram pohvaliti i tvoje super chic cipelice. Bas mi se dopadaju :)
ReplyDelete