

However, he is convinced he can really take it or leave it, and in some sense leaves it since he does provide such a life for himself, but lives quietly amidst it, while at the same time being aloof and scornful of the very life he enjoys so much. He always takes rooms in a pleasant bourgeois home and has a great nostalgia for the comforts and ease of bourgeois living with which he grew up. People who embrace the meaninglessness of life, who then create a world of meaning in the pursuit of knowledge, art and a certain view of perfection - theĭisciplined pursuit of the limited worthy things. Harry sees the world as divided into two basic classes of person: the ordinary citizen and himself and a handful like him, the steppenwolves of the world. What we do know about Harry is his view of himself as the Steppenwolf. He lives in a pair of rooms in a middle class home in a German Divorced but in a vague relationship with aĭistant girl friend, Harry is some sort of author and scholar, but we never really These comments are meant only for those who have already read the book, or who are unlikely to ever read it, or who may read it but really don't care if they know key twists in the plot.

It will be so very different from my other comments on books since rather than worry about spoiling the book for others by revealing key plot elements, I am throwing that Perhaps one of the most prepared readers Hesse has ever had. It is the story of a journey in reading Hesse's novel by someone who just happened to be 100% ready for this book, What follows is certainly not a "review" of Steppenwolf, and nothing like the "comments" I've written on other works. I've written about that earlier and posted it Unlike Harry, who seemed to see his life as one unit whole, I see my own as at least four different lives each emerging out The novel Steppenwolf seems itself a treatise on the life of Bob Corbett. I come to these notes on the novel having had an experience nearly as strange as Harry's even if a bit less mysterious. Society, living more life a lone wolf of the steppes of Asia. Name, referring to his tendency to live outside the world of human bourgeois This is so amazing since Steppenwolf is his own self-chosen He gets home and discovers it is Treatise On The Steppenwolf. The first occurs veryĮarly in the novel when Harry is walking down the street and a strange man thrusts a pamphlet into is hand.


In this strange tale of Harry Haller three different times he is confronted by weird events which are beyond coincidence and into the occult. Joseph Mileck and Horst Frenzĭid a revised translation from the Basil Creighton 1929 translation.
