Review:
"The Viennese enchantress Alma Schindler (1879-1964) was one of our era's most fascinating and fabled women. . . . The youthful Diaries . . . strongly illuminate her formative years. . . . Valuable, too, are the attached letters, playbills, concert programs, and snapshots, . . . and Alma's charming drawings, attesting to yet another side of this complex personality. . . . Absorbing . . . and . . . titillating. . . . An incisive portrait of a young femme fatale and a vivid eyewitness account of endearing and enervating turn-of-the-century Vienna." John Simon, New York Times Book Review" "Captures Alma's youthful impetuousness and celebrated entanglements . . . and will find a wide audience." Publishers Weekly (starred review)" "Apart from Alma's budding sexuality . . . the appeal and importance of these diaries probably resides in her account of daily life in very interesting circles. . . . The day-by-day account of where she went, who she met, and what she saw or listened to gives a good notion of daily life in Vienna at its peak." Kirkus Reviews" "Alma flirted with several of Vienna's most brilliant artists, and her diaries, which conclude with her engagement, are as enjoyable for their savvy artistic observations as for their sometimes racy sexuality. Beaumont's selections reveal a young woman with an iron will (she pulled her own molar) who nevertheless craved a submissive role. If her genius husband brought Western music to the edge of modernism, Alma seems balanced on the brink of the modern age a combination of proto-feminist and femme fatale." The New Yorker" "The diaries have been translated with panache and appalled affection by Antony Beaumont. 'In places, ' he writes in his introduction, 'one can almost picture Alma as a Bloomsbury debutante, but . . . she also like to assume more serious roles: the Catholic agnostic, the Nietzschean immoralist, the art critic, the femme fatale. I have done my best to vary the shades of purple accordingly.' The result is a portrait of Alma as an individual rather than an adjunct, an invaluable prelude to her well-documented career as a consort." Times Literary Supplement" "The most wonderful masterpiece of unconscious humour." The Spectator" "Partly a sober chronicle, partly a highly explosive journal intime . . . these jottings are far more than a mere biography." Suddeutsche Zeitung" "Until now, even experts knew little more than her own, radically white-washed memoirs. . . . Now we can reconstruct the tangled private life of this Viennese jugendstil belle." Der Spiegel"
Synopsis:
The manuscript of Alma Mahler's "Diaries", a pile of old exercise books, lay unread and seemingly illegible in the library of an American university. In search of the truth about Alma and Alexander Zemlinsky, Antony Beaumont read them - and found what he was looking for. But he also found more than he had expected. The "Diaries" depict in intimate detail the four years during which Alma grew from adolescence into womanhood. Opening with her first, heady affair with Gustav Klimt, they break off shortly before her marriage to Gustav Mahler. Beaumont felt that reading the diaries was like raising a curtain on the Vienna of 1900 to reveal the vitality of everyday life, eye-witness accounts of significant artistic events and insights into the behavioural patterns and linguistic conventions of the time and culture.
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