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Intended for the general reader, this two-volume work, first published in 1819, is a concise, popular interpretation of musical history.
A study of the Speziale al Giglio apothecary shop in fifteenth-century Florence, Italy.
"I cannot read Hermann Hesse without feeling that I am drawn into the presence of a deeply serious mind, a mind that is searching for the meaning of life." - Carl Jung A new translation of Hesse's 1904 Boccaccio. This edition also contains an epilogue by the translator, a philosophical glossary of concepts used by Hesse and a chronology of his life and work. Hesse won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1947. He also received the Goethe Prize of Frankfurt in 1946 and the 1955 Peace Prize of the German Booksellers. "Boccaccio is a biographical account of the life of the great Italian artist Giovanni Boccaccio, written by Hermann Hesse. Pathographys like this were also being published about other authors such as Freud and Jund at this time. Published in Berlin in April 1904, it delves into the complex lifespan and art of Boccaccio. This Pathography starts with his parents. The father of the novella's narrator, a resident of Certaldo, becomes entangled in the mercantile world of Florence. During an extended stay in Paris on behalf of a Florentine financier, he falls in love with a beguiling widow. From this liaison, Giovanni Boccaccio was born in 1313.