This abridgment presents the most significant of Oswald Spengler's arguments, linked by illuminating explanatory passages. It makes available in one volume a masterpiece of grand-scale history and far-reaching prophesy that remains essential reading for anyone interested in the factors that determine the course of civilizations.
For many years Spengler lived quietly in his home in Munich, thinking, writing, and pursuing his hobbies-collecting pictures and primitive weapons, listening to Beethoven quartets, and reading the comedies of Shakespeare and Molière. He took occasional trips to the Harz Mountains and to Italy. In 1936, three weeks before his fifty-sixth birthday, he died in Munich of a heart attack.
"Audacious, profound . . . exciting and magnificent."
-The New Republic
"This grand panorama, this imaginative sweep, this staggering erudition, this Nietzschean prose, with its fine color and ringing force, mark a work that must endure." -The New York Sun
"With monumental learning . . . Spengler surveys man's cosmic march. . . . Always forceful . . . eloquent."
-The New York Times