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The Sorrows of Young Werther (Pocket Penguin Classics)

The Sorrows of Young Werther (Pocket Penguin Classics)
By Johann Goethe

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Product Description

You only find true love once. When Werther dances with the beautiful Lotte, it seems as though he is in paradise. It is a joy, however, that can only ever be short-lived. Engaged to another man, she tolerates Werther’s adoration and encourages his friendship. She can never return his love. Broken-hearted, he leaves her home in the country, trying to escape his own desire. But when he receives a letter telling him that she is finally married, his passion soon turns to destructive obsession. And as his life falls apart, Werther is haunted by one certainty: He has lost his reason for living.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #57918 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-01-26
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 176 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Johann Wolfgang Goethe was born in Frankfurt in 1749. He is best remembered for his great works The Sorrows of Young Werther and Faust, and his part in the 18th century 'Sturm and Drang' movement. He died in 1832. Michael Hulse is an acclaimed literary German translator.


Customer Reviews

A Little Novel that Caused a Huge Sensation5
We tend to think of our era as unique when we descry the impact that the media has on our young people's behavior. Well the same thing happened 200 years ago when this book was first published. Impressionable young readers who identified so completely with Werther went out and committed suicide by the droves.

Werther is the prototypical Romantic male, who "feels" more deeply than the rest of humanity. Unlike Heathcliffe, who settles on revenge as an answer to his thwarted designs, Werther takes it out on himself. Of course, there's a great deal of self-destruction at work in Heathcliffe's persona too.

I would recommend this to a reader who is just getting to know Goethe. I read it when I was about eighteen and it definitely struck a nerve with me at that time. It made me want to read everything by Goethe I could find in translation.

Read it, and if you like it, as I am sure you will, go on to Goethe's two great Romantic novels, Elective Affinities and Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship. I found in my earlier readings that I never went wrong with Penguin Classics translations. They're normally all top-notch, whether Greek, Latin, French, German, Russian, etc. PS: If you're a young reader, please don't take Werther too much to heart. It's only a novel, ok?

"Be on your guard..."5
"...and take care not to fall in love!" Truly the first, and still the greatest, pieces of 'confessional' writing on the up's and down's, the trials and tribulations, that come with that awe-inspiring feeling we know as "love".

Whilst a previous reviewer noted this book is not for the recently heart broken, I would say the contrary. Anyone who has experienced both the passionate and romantic conditions of love, and has been affected in all aspects of their life as a result - hint: if you haven't then chances are you have not actually experienced love in its entirity! - simply MUST own a copy of this classic!

It is actually of great comfort in many resepcts, inasmuch as you can relate so directly with the feelings described, so to make the reader aware of the fact that you are not the first nor the last to have simultaneously enjoyed and endured such feelings.

A Tragic Love Story5
This book is possibly the most moving account of a young mans love. The words are so beautifully written and with such poignancy the reader is left with a heavy heart aching for the tragic young Werther.
I personally found reading this book to Beethovens Moonlight Sonata created a mood suited to the occasion. Not for the recently broken hearted