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A Life in the Making
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
A Life in the Making
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Authors and Contributors |
Translated by David Henry Wilson
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By (author) Franz Michael Felder
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Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:352 | Dimensions(mm): Height 198,Width 129 |
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Category/Genre | Memoirs |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781782276852
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Classifications | Dewey:943.6043092 |
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Audience | |
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Pushkin Press
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Imprint |
Pushkin Press
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Publication Date |
28 January 2021 |
Publication Country |
United Kingdom
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Description
Over the 29 years of his short life, Franz Michael Felder worked with furious productivity to better himself and the lives of those around him. From his humble origins in the Austrian village of Schoppernau, he went on to found workers' cooperatives, a political party and even a public library in his own home, while also writing many literary works. A Life in the Making is both the culmination of this extraordinary career and a chronicle of its development. It is a story of early hardship and fortitude, of Felder's relentless zeal for learning and his lifelong effort to reconcile his own expanding horizons with the enforced confines of the community he was born to. Unfolding in prose of limpid beauty, A Life in the Making becomes a deeply moving tribute to Felder's wife Nanni, and to his enduring belief in the possibility of a better world.
Author Biography
Franz Michael Felder (1839-1869) was born to a farming family in Schoppernau, Austria. Over the course of his short life, he created a towering legacy as a writer and social reformer. Felder was one of the first Austrian writers to document the farming life he was born to, and he earned a reputation as a rebel through his socially critical writing and work in politics and agricultural reform. He began to write his masterpiece, A Life in the Making, shortly after the death of his beloved wife Nanni, and Felder himself died only months after finishing it.
Reviews"One of the masterpieces of 19th-century German literature." -- Polis "Exhumed from oblivion... blessed with a strange power... The 21st-century reader will never forget this friend from Schoppernau." -- Le Matricule de Anges
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