This is Colm Toibin's novelization of the life of Thomas Mann, one of Germany's foremost authors. He came from a conservative family and his older brother, Heinrich, was the favorite. Heinrich decided to become an author and the family supported him in this but they had decided that Thomas should be in business and found him a job as a clerk. He hated this as he knew he wanted to write and while visiting Heinrich, wrote his first successful novel, A Death In Venice. He never went back to an office to work again.
He met and married the daughter of a wealthy and influential Jewish family. The couple had six children but his wife understood that Thomas had homosexual desires and would always have crushes on beautiful young men. She was able to handle this and the couple had a long and successful marriage.
Mann grew up as Hitler was becoming more influential in Germany. Many authors and artists came out against him early and Mann was encouraged to lead his support to this battle. But he believed early that Hitler would be ousted by the desires of the German people who would see through him, then later he believed that the military would end Hitler's influence. It wasn't until he began to see actions against those he loved and admired that he took the dictator seriously.
With the help of those high in the United States government and publishing circles, Mann was able to come to the United States where he took a position at Princeton. By then, he had written Buddenbrooks and The Magic Mountain and was considered one of the most influential Germans. He was able to get all his children and most of his family out of Germany although his wife's relatives lost everything and the Mann's family home was destroyed. Mann and his family would never again live in Germany as Mann believed the German people were complicit in the Nazi regime.
Colm Toibin is a successful Irish writer. In addition to this novelization of Thomas Mann's life, he also wrote The Master about Henry James. His novels have been nominated numerous times for the Booker and he has also been a regular on the Dublin Literary Award lists. Like Mann, Toibin now lives in the United States where he writes and teaches at Columbia. Readers will feel the slow influence of the Nazis rising and how it eventually affected all German families and then the entire world. They will also be inside the life of a famous author with all the outside pulls on his attention from those who want his influence. I was once again inspired to finally read The Magic Mountain and hopefully will do so this year. This book is recommended for historical and literary fiction readers.





























