592 pages

English language

Published June 2, 1989 by Penguin.

ISBN:
978-0-14-018138-8
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OCLC Number:
440178650

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This epic, sub-titled ‘The Decline of a Family’, was Mann’s first novel, published in 1901. It traces the gradual downfall of a wealthy family over four generations in the city of Lubeck. The novel is widely regarded as a classic portrait of bourgeois society and family life in 19th century Germany.

31 editions

reviewed Buddenbrooks by Thomas Mann (Everyman's library ;)

Watching a Family Fade One Generation at a Time

Few novels have made me feel the passage of time as vividly as Buddenbrooks. Rather than focusing on a single dramatic event, Thomas Mann traces the gradual rise and decline of a prosperous merchant family across several generations. As I moved through the lives of the Buddenbrooks, I felt as though I were watching a grand house slowly lose its foundations. Nothing collapses overnight. The change arrives through countless small decisions, disappointments, and shifts in character.

The novel begins with confidence and stability. The family enjoys wealth, social respect, and a strong sense of identity. Yet as generations pass, cracks begin to appear. I felt particularly drawn to Thomas Buddenbrook, whose dedication to duty and family reputation carries both strength and burden. His determination impressed me, but it also made me uneasy. The more he sacrifices himself to preserve the family legacy, the more isolated he becomes.

reviewed Buddenbrooks by Thomas Mann (Everyman's library ;)

A german classic worthwhile enduring

Thomas Mann is not without reason one of the great storytellers and seen as a monolith in German-language literature. With his debut novel "Buddenbrooks" he wrote a long read that provides a literary insight into the life of the Hanseatic upper middle class of the 19th century. If Buddenbrooks is read with the courage to skip boring passages at times, the classic becomes an entertaining read. Each member of the Buddenbrook family has a distinct personality, and with seamless time skips, Mann explores how it comes to pass that the Family's wealth, status and grain wholesale company slowly deteriorates. Thus, the characters grow on you and the almost pulpy blows of fate hit you hard, even though you have nothing in common with these fictional characters from another century. Of course, "Buddenbrooks" is showing its age and the length may be off-putting, but all in all, the novel is still …

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Subjects

  • German fiction -- 20th century.