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Amok by Stefan Zweig
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Amok (original 1922; edition 1922)

by Stefan Zweig

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4961949,350 (3.85)72
A new pocket edition of this Conradian tale of maddening desire, from the master of the novella On a sweltering ocean-liner travelling from India to Europe a passenger tells his story: the tale of a doctor in the Dutch East Indies torn between his duty and the pull of his emotions; a tale of power and desire, pride and shame and a headlong flight into folly. This is one the most intense and incisive of the novellas which brought Stefan Zweig to worldwide fame.… (more)
Member:barnouille
Title:Amok
Authors:Stefan Zweig
Info:Stock (2002), Broché, 230 pages
Collections:Your library
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Work Information

Amok: A Story by Stefan Zweig (Author) (1922)

  1. 00
    Chess Story by Stefan Zweig (DeusXMachina)
    DeusXMachina: Dissection of broken people
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» See also 72 mentions

English (11)  French (3)  German (1)  Spanish (1)  Italian (1)  Norwegian (1)  Catalan (1)  All languages (19)
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Più che una novella... un valzer che, nel girotondo ubriacante, suona il crepuscolo degli dei.

I valori di un tempo non possono sopravvivere e neppure creare ma solo finire in mare.

( )
  NewLibrary78 | Jul 22, 2023 |
This is a quick read. Eighty-eight pages which I was able to finish in one evening's reading. It would probably be called a novella. I read it as a book club selection. I joined the book club to push me out of my comfort zone. Since I never would have decided to read this on my own the book club membership is definitely achieving the goal. I like long novels. The longer the better. If I like a story I want to get lost in it. Short stories and novellas always leave me feeling cheated. They seem to end just at the point where it gets interesting. I always want more. A long novel has both plots and subplots and not just one developed character but often loads. The novella, not so much. One story, and just one or two characters. That definitely describes Amok. Spoiler alert. This review is going to describe almost all of the plot.

Unless I missed it Zweig does not even give the characters names. The first one we meet is a woman who is a passenger on an Ocean liner. In her attempt to deal with a stifling cabin she goes on deck in the middle of the night and works her way to sit on deck near the bow. Eventually she realizes there's another person there, visible only because of the glow in the pipe he's smoking. He excuses his hiding and lets her know he needs to avoid others on board. He eventually feels compelled to unburden himself by telling her his story and his need/duty to care for others as he is a doctor. He explains he ran away from Europe and became a contract physician in India where he avoided interacting with people for several years. One night a mysterious, nameless, lady appears at his door and explains she's been having feinting spells. He figures out she is probably pregnant but will not come out and ask him directly for an illegal abortion. She even proposes a large financial payment conditional on his leaving India even though he has a couple more years on this contract. He's insulted both by the offer and her arrogant manner. He uncharacteristically becomes a cad and lets her know he'll only do it if she will sleep with him. She immediately ends their discussion and exits.

This is the point at which the story turns. He immediately realizes his error as he's turned down someone desperately in need of his help. He rushes after her, thus the title, running... amok, but she reaches her train before he can catch up with her. As the foreigners in India are known to many he finds out she's the wife of a wealthy businessman's whose been out of the country for several months but who is expected to return in a few days. Now he understand her. He attempts to see her at home but is rebuffed. He resigns his position and attempts to see her at a ball. She avoids him. Now things turn dark. He is summoned only to find she's bleeding badly from a botched back alley abortion. He cannot save her and she makes him promise that her husband will never find out. He convinces the medical examiner he will leave India immediately if the medical examiner will certify her death as a heart attack. The husband returns and decides to take her body to England for an autopsy. How to prevent that is the dilemma. How he keeps his promise is the end of the story. It neatly explains a teaser dropped without much relevance at the very start of the novella. It's worth the quick read. ( )
  Ed_Schneider | May 9, 2023 |
Amok by Stefan Zweig is a short novel that tells the story of a troubled doctor who loses his mind in the tropics. He allows his passion to overtake his sanity and now is paying the price for his folly. The story is narrated by a passenger on a ship who meets the doctor and hears his story late one night. The doctor appears to be in desperate need for human contact and to confess his disturbing secret to someone.

This is a short and powerful story and, although I had very little sympathy for the doctor I was fascinated by his account of how his emotions were overpowered and he ran “amok”, heedless of any restrictions or rules. As he tells his story, we learn that he has a history of being influenced by domineering women but he also seems to be signifying that he has overcome his madness but by the end of the story it becomes clear that he had not.

Amok is a story of hatred, passion and duty as the doctor meets, becomes obsessed yet fails to help an English lady. I found the story quite captivating revealing as it does this man’s decaying values and morality. ( )
  DeltaQueen50 | Oct 25, 2022 |
Her İnsan Hatalar Yapar ama Bazılarının Bedeli Ağır Ödenir: Amok Koşucusu (İnceleme):
https://parttimegamersite.wordpress.com/2018/01/24/her-insan-hata-yapar-ama-bazi... ( )
  SultanNurK_Gucuk | Aug 11, 2021 |
Lo si divora. L'ho trovato molto simile, come impianto a: Le braci di Sandor Marai. Anche lì un monologo travolgente. Scrittore da approfondire e che entra di diritto tra i miei preferiti. ( )
  Atticus06 | Jun 9, 2020 |
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Nel marzo dell'anno 1912, mentre nel porto di Napoli erano in corso operazioni di scarico da un grosso transatlantico, si verificò uno strano incidente, di cui i giornali riferirono in modo ampio, ma assai fantasioso.
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A new pocket edition of this Conradian tale of maddening desire, from the master of the novella On a sweltering ocean-liner travelling from India to Europe a passenger tells his story: the tale of a doctor in the Dutch East Indies torn between his duty and the pull of his emotions; a tale of power and desire, pride and shame and a headlong flight into folly. This is one the most intense and incisive of the novellas which brought Stefan Zweig to worldwide fame.

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