Theodor Fontane

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Theodor Fontane (1819 – 1898) was a popular 19th-century German-language novelist whose works are still read but may not be easily available in English today. After a long career in journalism and travel writer, in his late fifties, he began writing a series of masterful novels, with one appearing every two or three years until his death in 1898. He is considered one of the leading writers of nineteenth century realism, not only because he took great pains to ensure factual accuracy of details in fictional scenes, but also because he depicted his characters in terms of what they said or did and refrained from overtly imputing motives to characters. Fontane's importance as a novelist of great popular success is especially noteworthy because many of his works delve into topics that were more or less taboo for discussion in polite society of his day, including marital infidelity, abandonment of children, and suicide. His characters range from lower-middle class to Prussian nobility. Most of Fontane's life was spent in cosmopolitan Berlin, the thriving capital of Bismarck's newly-unified Germany.

Fontane works with translations into English

This is an incomplete list, for now.

  • Unterm Birnbaum, 1885 - About a murder and its after-math.
  • Irrungen, Wirrungen, 1888 - About an affair between a wealthy officer and a lower-middle-class Berlin girl.
  • Unwiederbrichlich, 1891 - About a troubled marriage in Holstein in 1859-1861, five years before the German/Danish war.
  • Frau Jenny Treibel, 1892 - About attempts by a schoolmaster's daughter to marry new wealth.
    • tbd
  • Effi Briest, 1894 - About conventional demands that a wronged husband must seek retribution for a long-past adultery, thus ruining a not unhappy marriage in the present.
    • tbd

  1. Beyond Recall (Unwiederbringlich) by Theodor Fontane, Translated with an Introduction by Douglas Parmée. London, Oxford University Press, 1964. Volume 602 in The World Classics