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In the Shadow of the Magic Mountain: The Erika and Klaus Mann Story
 
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In the Shadow of the Magic Mountain: The Erika and Klaus Mann Story [Hardcover]

Andrea Weiss (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 15, 2008
Thomas Mann’s two eldest children, Erika and Klaus, were unconventional, rebellious, and fiercely devoted to each other. Empowered by their close bond, they espoused vehemently anti-Nazi views in a Europe swept up in fascism and were openly, even defiantly, gay in an age of secrecy and repression. Although their father’s fame has unfairly overshadowed their legacy, Erika and Klaus were serious authors, performance artists before the medium existed, and political visionaries whose searing essays and lectures are still relevant today. And, as Andrea Weiss reveals in this dual biography, their story offers a fascinating view of the literary and intellectual life, political turmoil, and shifting sexual mores of their times.
            In the Shadow of the Magic Mountain begins with an account of the make-believe world the Manns created together as children—an early sign of their talents as well as the intensity of their relationship. Weiss documents the lifelong artistic collaboration that followed, showing how, as the Nazis took power, Erika and Klaus infused their work with a shared sense of political commitment. Their views earned them exile, and after escaping Germany they eventually moved to the United States, where both served as members of the U.S. armed forces. Abroad, they enjoyed a wide circle of famous friends, including Andre Gide, Christopher Isherwood, Jean Cocteau, and W. H. Auden, whom Erika married in 1935. But the demands of life in exile, Klaus’s heroin addiction, and Erika’s new allegiance to their father strained their mutual devotion, and in 1949 Klaus committed suicide.
            Beautiful never-before-seen photographs illustrate Weiss’s riveting tale of two brave nonconformists whose dramatic lives open up new perspectives on the history of the twentieth century.
(20071214)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Andrea Weiss proves here that complex life forms can thrive in the dark. In the Shadow of the Magic Mountain illuminates not only its primary subjects, Erika and Klaus Mann, but also the father who overshadowed them. A brilliant and important work of historical and literary portraiture.”—David Hajdu, author of The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America
(David Hajdu )

“Weiss has got hold of an intrinsically dramatic story, and she tells it well. The dual lives of Thomas Mann’s eldest children combine homosexuality, political conflict, and the unfathomable burden of being the offspring of Germany’s greatest living writer. The chief merit of Weiss’s lively rendering of this story is the way she links the fates of Mann’s progeny not only to one another but to many of the major figures of European culture. Hence her book also tells us a great deal about the lives of anti-fascist intellectuals and artists in the Nazi era.”—­Paul Robinson, author of Gay Lives: Homosexual Autobiography from John Addington Symonds to Paul Monette
(Paul Robinson )

"Theirs is a fascinating tale. Outside the pages of the Manns'' own memoirs and essays, or Klaus''s deeply personal fiction, it''s hard to imagine it more sympathetically told."—Ian Brunskill, Times (UK)
(Ian Brunskill Times (UK) )

"A fascinating glimpse into the two Manns'' eventful and celebrity-filled lives."—Gay & Lesbian Review
(Gay & Lesbian Review )

"The scene was set, the drama a tragedy. Klaus''s lifelong attempt to win his father''s approval--or die trying, which he did--was a campaign complicated and harried by cataclysmic world events brought masterfully into play by Weiss, and summed up on one word: Hitler."
(Kathy Hunt The Australian )

"If you''ve ever dreamed of entering the elite literary circles of André Gide, Bertolt Brecht, Christopher Isherwood, and Carson McCullers, here''s your passport."—Advocate
("Best of Summer Reading" The Advocate )

About the Author

Andrea Weiss is professor in the Film/Video Program at the City College of New York and the author of Paris Was a Woman: Portraits from the Left Bank and Vampires and Violets: Lesbians in Film. She has been an independent filmmaker for over twenty-five years, and her documentary Escape to Life: The Erika and Klaus Mann Story will be released on DVD in 2008.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 310 pages
  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press (April 15, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0226886727
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226886725
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,319,666 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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13 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The two oldest children of Thomas Mann attempt to make their way in the world, April 22, 2008
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This review is from: In the Shadow of the Magic Mountain: The Erika and Klaus Mann Story (Hardcover)
Erika and Klaus Mann were the two oldest children of Thomas Mann. Erika was born in 1905 and died in 1969. Klaus was born in 1906 and committed suicide in 1949. They both were talented and dynamic but flawed people. (Yes, everyone is flawed, but with some their flaws so pale in comparison to their character and achievements that they are easily overlooked.) I don't say this because of the liberal political views of Erika and Klaus or their sexual preferences. Rather, both Erika and Klaus were overly self-indulgent, sometimes lapsing into dissipation, especially as regards their sexual promiscuity and their persistent drug use (in Klaus's case, drug addiction); and both clearly were children of privilege, who might have paid lip service to empathizing with the common man but never were able -- or inclined, to judge from this book -- to let go of their parents' purse-strings. Like many liberals of privilege, they remained elitists.

The title of the book has two possible implications: one, that Erika and Klaus never were able to fully live their own lives but instead were hamstrung in various ways by their famous father or by public perceptions of him; or two, that it is one of those injustices of fate that in the cultural history of the Twentieth Century, Erika Mann and Klaus Mann barely left a mark, while their father is generally thought to be one of the literary giants of the century. The book itself suggests that the first implication is at least partly true for Klaus Mann, who ardently desired, even existentially needed, to be a writer but never could disregard the inevitable unfavorable comparisons to his father. But that first implication does not really fit Erika. And the second possible implication, to my mind, fits neither. They are "interesting" but decidedly minor figures of the Twentieth Century; neither, even together, truly warrrants a book-length biography.

Nonetheless, I can recommend IN THE SHADOW OF THE MAGIC MOUNTAIN, although not unreservedly so (hence the four stars, actually three-and-a-half rounded up). There are two principal reasons that elevate the book above arcana. First, it includes much of interest about others in the remarkable Mann family, including, most importantly, Thomas Mann, but also his older brother Heinrich and his wife (and mother of Erika and Klaus), Katia Pringsheim, the daughter of two secular Jews and a remarkable woman in her own right. Second, the contextual discssion of the periods of the Twentieth Century in which Erika and Klaus lived is often instructive, especially the portrayals of Weimar Germany and (later) post-War United States. Erika and Klaus, as well as Thomas and Katia, had fled Nazi-occupied Europe to this country and all were staunch supporters of the Allied war effort. Klaus even served in the U.S. Army and Erika conducted broadcasts in German of Allied news and messages. But after the war, they were unfairly enveloped in anti-communist and anti-intellectual (and perhaps anti-homosexual) hysteria and eventually the FBI and INS succeeded in making them feel so unwelcome that Erika and her parents (Klaus having committed suicide in the interim) returned to Europe. There was not a germ of truth to the suspicion of communist sympathies; instead, their crime was that they were "premature anti-Fascists" (people, especially non-Jews, who had publicly opposed the Nazis before the U.S. government officially opposed the Nazis -- such people were suspected by the FBI and McCarthyites as communists at heart). Yet another blot on the escutcheon of the FBI (and this country).

By and large, Andrea Weiss does a good job in teasing a story from myriad sources, and despite obvious temptations, she never slips into a gossipy tone. The writing, although solid, is not special; there are a few instances of melodrama; the organization at times could be tighter; and towards the end of the book there are signs of mild sloppiness (for example, "artillery" is used on page 209 when "aerial bombing" is meant, and on page 220 Bruno Walter is referred to as a great "composer" when "conductor" is much more appropriate).
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars fascinating literary history, June 20, 2009
This review is from: In the Shadow of the Magic Mountain: The Erika and Klaus Mann Story (Hardcover)
This portrait of the two eldest Mann children (they had six) is thorough, well-paced, and sympathetic. Although the era they lived in has been endlessly documented, rightly so as a cautionary tale, Weiss shows its politics, both in Europe and in the U.S., through the lens of the Mann siblings' activism, giving the reader a fresh perspective. Erika and Klaus were both talented artists and passionate anti-Fascists. They were both peripatetic yet tied in arguably unhealthy ways to their parents, especially to their famous father. I learned a lot and came away with an ever greater appreciation of the personal toll this time in history took on people of conscious.
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