So, I have read a short story by Stefan Zweig “Forgotten
Dreams” and decided to read one of his books the “Burning Secret”. The Austrian author is quit an engaging
writer and the descriptions, and confusion he puts the reader through is just
right. I find his style to be a bit gloomy and mysterious, also twisted too
depending on the perspective you look at it from.
I feel as though Stefan has the reader enter into a dark
territory from the voice in which they perceive the story from. I can tell thus
far that his stories are many stories intertwined with each other in the realm
of secrets revealed and unveiled. The
mood and tone is well set in the way he writes and immediately brings me in the
story without me pondering when it will be complex and interesting, because
from the very beginning it is introduced in such way.
“Burning Secret” ended up being perverse and twisted in the
ending of the novel. We never really
know what actually happened, as if parts were a dream but maybe even not. But
perhaps the ambiguity is present in most of his writings; I’d have to read more
to know. Edgar is the center of the novel, a young boy about 12 years of age
wanting to pursue adulthood already and overcoming an illness. He and his
mother go to an Austrian resort after his illness to recover.
The Baron is the predatory seducer, in which we see the
characters from a deeper perspective now that their lives are encountered. The
Baron stays at the resort and preys on the woman and gets to her first through
the friendship of the child. Much deceit, lust, passion, and tumultuous things
happen after the many encounters and the growing engagement between the three
people.
At the end, I asked myself if Edgar the young boy was
suffering from a mental illness that made the events so confusing and unclear.
There could be a few possibilities of what really happened for the reader but
all of them are going to be disturbing. I appreciate that Stefan chose that and
leaves us unsettled and puzzled.
The Wes Anderson film “ The Grand Budapest Hotel” was beautiful
and timeless. The color livelihood and the changes of the color palette
throughout the film told the story even more. Many film devices were used that
were old fashion, and overall the film was old fashion in a modern way.