Musil's limpid, psychological evocation of adolescent sexuality and its
often sadistic eroticism which anticipates the carnage of both World
Wars.
As the nineteenth century draws to an end, young Törless is sent to a
military boarding school for the sons of the nobility on the eastern
outreaches of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Far from his comfortable,
free-thinking bourgeois home and left to his own devices, he experiences
the joy, pain and self-doubt of adolescence. He is confronted with
desire and love, but also his own cruelty, as he finds himself
participating in his fellow pupils' bullying campaigns.
A dark Bildungsroman which shocked its readership at the time, Robert
Musil's first novel is a fresco of psychoanalysis, philosophy,
eroticism, snobbery, sado-masochism and schoolboy humour, a hothouse of
alternately repressed and unchained desires that prefigure the carnage
of both World Wars.