AUDIOBOOK

The Stefan Zweig Collection - Volume 4
A New Translation
Stefan ZweigSeries: Stefan Zweig Collection(0)
About
The Stefan Zweig Collection – Volume 4: Moments of Reckless Passion
Three novellas, one obsession: the split second when desire erupts, conventions shatter, and life pivots irrevocably.
Twenty-Four Hours in the Life of a Woman (1927) - On the sun-drenched Riviera, an English widow long sealed in respectability becomes mesmerized by the fevered hands of a young Polish gambler at the roulette table. Within a single day she moves from curiosity to compassion to all-consuming devotion - resurrecting and imperiling her sense of self in equal measure.
Burning Secret (1911) - At an Austrian Alpine spa, a worldly baron befriends a lonely twelve-year-old boy as a calculated route to seducing his mother. Told through the boy's bewildered eyes, the novella exposes how easily innocence becomes collateral damage when desire turns predatory. The aftermath scorches everyone.
The Wonders of Life (1904) - Antwerp, 1566. An elderly painter commissions a young Jewish orphan as his model for a Madonna. Through the act of painting her, she blossoms into womanhood - until the iconoclastic fury of the Reformation threatens to destroy everything precious to both artist and model. Already in this early work, Zweig reveals his fascination with how a single encounter can reshape a life forever.
Read in sequence, these novellas trace an arc from rapturous awakening through corrosive seduction to spiritual transformation. Swift, elegant, and unsparing, Zweig's prose makes each turning point feel urgently contemporary - reminding us that destinies can pivot on a heartbeat.
Three novellas, one obsession: the split second when desire erupts, conventions shatter, and life pivots irrevocably.
Twenty-Four Hours in the Life of a Woman (1927) - On the sun-drenched Riviera, an English widow long sealed in respectability becomes mesmerized by the fevered hands of a young Polish gambler at the roulette table. Within a single day she moves from curiosity to compassion to all-consuming devotion - resurrecting and imperiling her sense of self in equal measure.
Burning Secret (1911) - At an Austrian Alpine spa, a worldly baron befriends a lonely twelve-year-old boy as a calculated route to seducing his mother. Told through the boy's bewildered eyes, the novella exposes how easily innocence becomes collateral damage when desire turns predatory. The aftermath scorches everyone.
The Wonders of Life (1904) - Antwerp, 1566. An elderly painter commissions a young Jewish orphan as his model for a Madonna. Through the act of painting her, she blossoms into womanhood - until the iconoclastic fury of the Reformation threatens to destroy everything precious to both artist and model. Already in this early work, Zweig reveals his fascination with how a single encounter can reshape a life forever.
Read in sequence, these novellas trace an arc from rapturous awakening through corrosive seduction to spiritual transformation. Swift, elegant, and unsparing, Zweig's prose makes each turning point feel urgently contemporary - reminding us that destinies can pivot on a heartbeat.
Related Subjects
Extended Details
- SeriesStefan Zweig Collection #4