The Sorrows of Young Werther was Goethe's bestselling novel when he was alive, and I'm trying to understand why. Written over the course of a month when Johann Wolfgang von Goethe was 24, The Sorrows of Young Werther is a seemingly typical Romantic novel, but it was written and published in 1774, well before such works were common. It glorifies suicide, and even well over a century later, people were emulating the final suicide in the book.
I read the audiobook, which played the same annoying piano theme every 15 minutes. To say the least, I didn't love it. I do like the literary movement of Germany during this time - Goethe, Schiller, Lenz, Klinger - it's called Sturm und Drang, and of course, The Sorrows of Young Werther is the best example of that movement. Perhaps there is too much foreshadowing, or perhaps I was betrayed the ending and several themes by the introduction and the general reputation of the novel.
I am underplaying how gripping this novel is. You know he's going to kill himself in the end, but how and why? This is a great novel, and I did find myself reading it at five o'clock in the morning, rushing to finish it. I'm sure that my next book will be of the space-opera-featuring-a-talking-beer-can variety, but I'm enjoying my journeys into classic literature.
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