The House of Wittgenstein: A Family at War |  | Author: Alexander Waugh Publisher: Doubleday Category: Book
List Price: $28.95 Buy Used: $5.97 as of 9/7/2010 00:34 CDT details You Save: $22.98 (79%)
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Seller: tacoma_goodwill Rating: 16 reviews Sales Rank: 304,630
Media: Hardcover Edition: First Edition Pages: 352 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 6.4 x 1.3
ISBN: 0385520603 Dewey Decimal Number: 929.20943613 EAN: 9780385520607 ASIN: 0385520603
Publication Date: February 24, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| • | ISBN13: 9780385520607 | | • | Condition: New | | • | Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed |
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Product Description
From Alexander Waugh, the author of the acclaimed memoir Fathers and Sons, comes a grand saga of a brilliant and tragic Viennese family.
The Wittgenstein family was one of the richest, most talented, and most eccentric in European history. Karl Wittgenstein, who ran away from home as a wayward and rebellious youth, returned to his native Vienna to make a fortune in the iron and steel industries. He bought factories and paintings and palaces, but the domineering and overbearing influence he exerted over his eight children resulted in a generation of siblings fraught by inner antagonisms and nervous tension. Three of his sons committed suicide; Paul, the fourth, became a world-famous concert pianist, using only his left hand and playing compositions commissioned from Ravel and Prokofiev; while Ludwig, the youngest, is now regarded as one of the greatest philosophers of the twentieth century. In this dramatic historical and psychological epic, Alexander Waugh traces the triumphs and vicissitudes of a family held together by a fanatical love of music yet torn apart by money, madness, conflicts of loyalty, and the cataclysmic upheaval of two world wars. Through the bleak despair of a Siberian prison camp and the terror of a Gestapo interrogation room, one courageous and unlikely hero emerges from the rubble of the house of Wittgenstein in the figure of Paul, an extraordinary testament to the indomitable spirit of human survival.
Alexander Waugh tells this saga of baroque family unhappiness and perseverance against incredible odds with a novelistic richness to rival Thomas Mann’s Buddenbrooks.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 16
Rollicking Jolly Read June 24, 2009 Mary E. Riley (Linthicum, MD) 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
Vaguely aware of who the Wittgenstein brothers Paul and Ludwig were, I feared the subject matter would be a highbrow detailed discussion of their works. Quite the contrary! Mr. Waugh disdains what could have been a dry pedantic review and approaches the story from another angle: a uniquely vibrant and talented family, graced with impossible wealth, who just don't get along very well. It's a rollickingly jolly read, full of humor, quirkiness, personality, and intelligence. "I never wanted it to end," as the old chestnut goes. The personal foibles of the famous are always a source of fascination and this book is bang on winner. You won't be sorry you bought it.
A Troubled but Interesting Family April 7, 2009 Eugene McCammon (Knoxville, Tennessee) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Fiction would find it difficult to top this account of a 19th-20th century European family: raised in great wealth but generally unable to manage life. Being as I am in music the book was doubly interesting. Can you imagine Johannes Brahms coming to a musicale at your home? Highly recommended.
reat summer read July 6, 2009 Gerda Albert (Jackson Heights, NY) Very interesting read about a rich, powerful and dysfunctional family in the city of my birth. The more I read, the more I learn. Gorgeous cover art.
eccentricity and brilliance at their best/worst February 22, 2010 Poetry Reader (Madison, Wisconsin USA) This is a fascinating look into the life of the lesser-known (but no less brilliant and crazed and obsessive) brother, Ludwig. No novel could as persuasively match the facts of one of the most afflicted (with genius and torment) families in the twentieth century.
EXTRAORDINARY & BIZARRE April 5, 2010 W. Hemeter (New Orleans) I'm about half through the book but can hardly put it down. What a brilliant, talented, unstable & self indulgent family! I've lost count of suicides in the family & their associates. A story well worth telling & well told by Alexander Waugh.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 16
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