- Joined
- Aug 25, 2013
- Location
- Hannover, Germany
Yes, it does. And especially Fontane was a master of metaphors, you can translate nearly any outward action into an emotion. I wish my English would be better so I would be able to describe it better. Some folks find him boring because nearly every German student had to read one of his novels and most have not discovered the beauty behind that old-fashioned but somewhat refined language.Does 19th century German writing and vocabulary seem richer than modern German as seems to be the case with English?
All of them.Which of Fontane's books have you read?
I liked best his 4-volume novel "Vor dem Sturm" which describes the last winter of the Napoleonic era, Prussia's struggle for freedom from French government by describing the lives of some noblemen and their families and some scenes from everyday life in Berlin in 1812.
Then I like "Frau Jenny Treibel", "Der Stechlin" and "Unwiederbringlich". And all the other Berlin novels.
I enjoyed the heck out of it. I never thought I'd say that, but as a teacher, you get absolutely crazed reading nonfiction and teaching all day. I usually do a big spurt of nonfiction during the end of the summer--but during the school year, I want something I don't have to think too hard about. Like someone mentioned, I grew up with Louis L'Amour, and as he used to say, if he wrote about a rock, it was there. I like that. I also like great nonfiction like that of Mr. Wittenberg. Just depends on the mood. And no one here has mentioned Howard Bahr and his wonderful trilogy on Franklin...but it should be.