Description
This is the first English-language edition of
Klingsor's Last Summer, which was originally published in 1920, a year after
Demian and two years before
Siddhartha. The book has three parts: a story called
A Child's Heart, followed by
Klein and Wagner and
Klingsor's Last Summer, Hesse's two longest and finest novellas. These novellas, along with
Siddhartha (the three works were republished in 1931 under the title
The Inward Way), are the first fruits of the period that began in the spring of 1919, when Hesse settled in the Ticino mountain village of Montagnola to start a new life without his wife and children.
A Child's Heart, written in January 1919, in Basel, concerns the transmutation of a boy's innocence into knowledge of good and evil, and the painful guilt that accompanies this process.
Both
Klein and Wagner (written in May-June 1919, immediately after the arrival in Montagnola) and
Klingsor's Last Summer (written shortly after) are set in a southern landscape that reflects Hesse's life that summer; both novellas have heroes who are more or less Hesse's age at the time; and in both the hero's death is preceded by a grand vision of unity in which the polarities of life are resoluved. Hesse exposes himself mercilessly in
Klein and Wagner, a story of escape, wrenching loose, letting go. But the expressionist painter Klingsor is a more direct self-portrait of the Hesse of 1919.