Searls infuses the prose of Nobel laureate Mann (1875-1955) with momentum and energy in this excellent collection. English-language readers will find the humor and digressive appeal of Mann's prose enhanced... A well-chosen excerpt from the novel Confessions of a Con Artist, by Felix Krull exhibits a connection between the title character, a peripatetic young man, and Mann's other protagonists: "What a royal gift the imagination is, and what pleasure it affords us!" Felix narrates. Throughout, the characters are linked by their unspeakable desires, and their inner worlds are just as significant as, and often more so than, their actions. Scholars as well as those new to Mann will find much to appreciate in Searls's stimulating approach.-- "Publishers Weekly"
I have long loved Thomas Mann's subtlety, erudition, and elegant mind, but it wasn't until reading these newly translated stories that I picked up the range of the author's irony and humor. The art of translation seems to me the most delicate and precise of literary arts, and Damion Searls stands at the very apex of translators into English.--Lauren Groff, author of Matrix
Damion Searls has produced the perfect Mann translation; the author's erudition and aesthetic sensibility are mutually enhanced instead of one being sacrificed for the other. Mann has never been more readable in English, and the English reader never more aware of the shining beauty of the source.--Anton Hur, translator
Although Mann's stories are more than a century old, Damion Searls's new translations capture the writer's sly humor and warmth, making these short masterpieces feel wholly modern. Readers who know Mann will see him anew; for those who haven't read him yet, this collection is a superb introduction to one of the greats.--Rumaan Alam, author of Leave the World Behind
Searls's selections of this funny, ironic, exceptionally readable 20th-century writer's work are as inspired as his engaging and lucid translations: here we have the slow-burning torment and humiliation of 'Louisey, ' the charming irony of 'Confessions of a Con Artist, By Felix Krull, ' the startling emotional acuity of 'A Day in the Life of Hanno Buddenbrook, ' and the great rediscovery, 'Chaotic World and Childhood Sorrow, ' which condenses a novel's worth of empathy, family conflict, and fine-grained observation into a riveting story less than forty pages long. Towering above all is 'Death in Venice'--the extraordinary pandemic tale, refreshed and haunting in its best-ever translation. I've spent years waiting for the Mannaissance--the publication of New Selected Stories will, at last, bring it into being.--Mark Krotov, coeditor, n+1
Searls' superb translations of Mann's most essential short works emphasize moments of despair and levity, breathing fresh humanity into the stories of the famously solemn German literary giant . . . Searls is meticulous in his attention to German-language nuance but intuitive in channeling the tensions and rhythms of his source material. His introduction reveals a deep fascination with Mann's complexities, and an anxiety that Mann might soon be dismissed as a twentieth-century relic with little relevance to today's readers. His work here goes a long way toward preventing that from happening.--Brendan Driscoll "Booklist"
In this vigorous new version . . . Searls takes pains to bring Mann's decades-old prose to life without anachronism or false breeziness . . . A well-chosen, confidently translated gathering of stories that casts new light on its author.--Kirkus Reviews, starred review
In his witty, insightful, and charming introduction, Searls makes some useful observations about why Mann's personal life is worth addressing . . . It's a useful reminder of the subversive power of cultural hybridity -- a writer whose Germanness was central to his public identity in fact contained multitudes.--Matt Hanson "Arts Fuse"
[A] trip into timeless themes of youthful innocence; the perpetual struggle between discipline and desire; and more. Readers turn to Mann not for lickety-split action but to take a literary amble through poetic sentences; those in the market for old-school leisure won't be disappointed.--Michael Magras "Shelf Awareness"