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book cover of 

The Real Tadzio 

Boy Who Inspired Death in Venice 

by

Gilbert AdairThe Real Tadzio (2001)
Boy Who Inspired Death in Venice
A non fiction book by Gilbert Adair

 
In the summer of 1911, the German writer Thomas Mann visited Venice in the company of his wife Katia. There, in the Grand Hotel des Bains, as he waited for the dinner-going to ring, the author's roving eye was drawn to a nearby Polish family, the Moeses, consisting of a mother, three daughters, and a young sailor-suited son who, to Mann, exuded an almost supernatural beauty and grace. Inspired by this glancing encoutner with the luminous child, Mann wrote Death in Venice, and the infatuated writer made of that boy, Wladyslaw Moes, one of the twentieth century's most potent and enduring icons. According to Gilbert Adair in his sparkling evocation of that idyll on the Adriatic, Mann wrote his novella, "as though taking dictation from God." But precisely who was the boy? And what was his reaction to the publication of Death of Venice in 1912 and, later, the release of Luchino Viconti's film adaptation in 1971? In this revealing portrait, including telling photographs, Gilbert Adair brilliantly juxtaposes the life of Wladyslaw Moes with that of his mythic twin, Tadzio. It is a fascinating account of a man who was immortalized by a genius, yet forgotten by history.

 
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Paperback Editions

July 2003 : Paperback
Cover of ISBN: 0786712473Title: The Real Tadzio: Thomas Mann's Death in Venice and the Boy Who Inspired It
Author(s): Gilbert Adair
ISBN: 0-7867-1247-3 / 978-0-7867-1247-2 (USA edition)
Publisher: Carroll & Graf
Availability: Amazon   Amazon UK   Amazon CA   
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