Strange News from Another Star

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Strange News from Another Star
HHesseStrangeNewsCover.jpg
English first edition cover (1972)
Author Hermann Hesse
Original title Märchen
Translator Denver Lindley
Cover artist David Pocknell
Country Germany
Language German
Genre Short story
Publisher S. Fischer Verlag
Publication date
1919
Published in English
1972
Media type Print

Strange News from Another Star is a collection of eight short stories written by the German author Hermann Hesse between 1913 and 1918. It was first published as Märchen in German in 1919 and was translated to English by Denver Lindley in 1972. The first English publication was in 1972.

Stories

The stories, with the year in which they were written, are:

  • "Augustus" (1913)
  • "The Poet" (1913)
  • "Flute Dream" (1914)
  • "Strange News from Another Star" (1915)
  • "The Hard Passage" (1917)
  • "A Dream Sequence" (1916)
  • "Faldum" (1916)
  • "Iris" (1918)

Märchen (which means Fairy Tales) comprised seven of these stories. "Flute Dream" was added for the English publication in 1972 as per an arrangement Hesse had made for the final collected edition of his works.

These stories were also published in The Complete Fairy Tales of Hermann Hesse in 1995 with a new English translation by Jack Zipes. Two of the stories' English titles changed with this new translation:

  • "Strange News from Another Star" became "Strange News from Another Planet"
  • "The Hard Passage" became "The Difficult Path"

Background

These stories were written prior to and during the First World War and brought Hesse into conflict with supporters of the war, his country and its government. Unlike his earlier works, these stories do not lend themselves to rational interpretation. They are essentially fairy tales dealing with dream worlds, the subconscious and magic. In these stories, Hesse challenged conventional intellectual life and the orthodoxy of the world.

References in popular culture

References

External links