Thomas Mann wrote his last great novel, Doctor Faustus, during his
exile from Nazi Germany. Although he already had a long string of
masterpieces to his name, in retrospect this seems to be the novel he
was born to write.
A modern reworking of the Faust legend in which a twentieth-century
composer sells his soul to the devil for the artistic power he craves,
the story brilliantly interweaves music, philosophy, theology, and
politics. Adrian Leverkühn is a talented young composer who is willing
to go to any lengths to reach greater heights of achievement. What he
gets is twenty-four years of genius--years of increasingly extraordinary
musical innovation intertwined with progressive and destructive madness.
A scathing allegory of Germany's renunciation of its own humanity and
its embrace of ambition and nihilism, Doctor Faustus is also a
profound meditation on artistic genius. Obsessively exploring the evil
into which his country had fallen, Mann succeeds as only he could have
in charting the dimensions of that evil; his novel has both the
pertinence of history and the universality of myth.
Translated from the German by H. T. Lowe-Porter