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Hardcover The Brothel in Rosenstrasse Book

ISBN: 0881843334

ISBN13: 9780881843330

The Brothel in Rosenstrasse

(Book #2 in the Von Bek Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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5 ratings

Super Reader

Count Von Bek this time, and we are closing on the twentieth century, timewise. The Count has come to the famous brothel, and brought along his very young girlfriend. They are out to have some fun, and plenty of s*x, too, of course. Or a combination. Amidst all the shagging, war and the outside world intervene.

An extravagant, erotic and tragic tale

This book clinches Moorcock's ability to capture multiple genres; anyone thinking him a one-trick pony with the swords-and-sorcery/sci-fi of the Elric and Hawkmoon books needs to investigate this novel, along with the Colonel Pyat, Jerry Cornelius, and Karl Glogauer novels, as well as "Gloriana, or the Unfulfill'd Queen." This tale finds Rickhardt von Bek and his teenage lover, Alexandra, living a lazy, extravagant life in 1890s Mirenburg. Initially, it reads like a journal of personal excess and adventure, until the setting moves to Frau Schmetterling's brothel and the political forces ruling Waldenstein square off for war. Von Bek's search for pleasure and satisfaction begins to seem more in vain as the city is bombarded, and the 19th Century Gilded Age dream becomes a 20th Century nightmare of heavy warfare. As Mirenburg falls, so do von Bek's dreams of la dolce vita and his relationship with Alexandra crumbles along with the city's beautiful buildings. There are, of course, plenty of naughty bits to go along with the more serious bits, and these are well-executed. Definitely a recommended read.

Well worth the search!

This book and Letters from Hollywood originally appeared around the same time from the same UK publisher. I still haven't found Letters from Hollywood (the letters Moorcock wrote to Ballard when Moorcock was working in Hollywood) which has some beautiful illustrations, so if anyone out there has a copy for sale... I got this in the US hardback, done by Carrol and Graf and it's well worth waiting for. I think it's one of Moorcock's best. Tight, sharp and very sexy, the whole thing's set in a brothel in middle-Europe at the turn of the 20th century -- pretty much exactly a century ago, where the politics don't seem alrogether unfamiliar and neither do the sexual obsessions! There's no fantasy in it (unless you count the acting out of sexual fantasy). It describes an old roue who takes up with a young girl, takes her with him to a famous bordello in Moorcock's fictional Mirenberg (a sort of amalgamation of Nurenberg and Prague). While there, war begins to build. The usual attitudes are struck and compromises fall. The collapse of the erotic fantasy into reality is mirrored by the collapse of high society as the war comes closer and closer and their short-sightedness fails to halt it, as they almost welcome it. This collapse from fantasy into reality is mirrored by the collapse of the Edwardian 'golden' society as the entire city comes under attack. It's a beautiful, often sensuous story, very short for Moorcock, but as usual very much to the point. Itr leaves you at once yearning for a vanished past that probably never existed and mourning the human forces which so frequently translate into aggression and hatred when they could easily become cooperation and love. Moorcock is a realist through and through -- his fantasies show you that -- with his feet on some solid philosophical, sexual and historical ground -- and this, like his more complex Pyat books, examines our presumptions about our own cultural virtues as well as our obsessions with sex and its confusion with power. For anyone who wants a fine substantial read, this would also be a good introduction to those a bit daunted at beginning the wonderful Pyat series.

Warning: Genius at Work

For me this was a departure from Moorcock's usual tales of the fantastic. While the reader looking for Elric or Corum-style tales may be disappointed, the novel itself is far from disappointing. The characters are some of the strongest Moorcock has developed, from Von Bek and his young lover Alexandra to the various denizens in the Brothel, each one brings strong feelings and opinions to the war around them. As those in the brothel use its charms to escape the reality of war, so does Von Bek use these recollections of his past to escape his inevitable death. This novel is out of print so try used book stores or auction sites on the internet, which is where I found it. If you can appreciate great writing, then by all means try and get ahold of a copy.

Not for the Faint-Hearted

I sincerely hope The Brothel in Rosenstrasse will someday be reprinted. It is one of the finest works of a literary genius, and I am saddened to think that readers will be deprived of this novel. Moorcock's superhuman knack for vivid description goes into overdrive in this book, as he recreates a series of feverish memories of a time of luxuriant perversities and meager strife, maintaining a brilliant counterpoint throughout. The cast of characters is stunning and real, as if they were transcribed from some party the author had attended. The explicit details of the main character's decline from the role of sexual dominator to sexually dominated parallels the heart-wrenching destruction of the beautiful, ancient city around him, a powerful yet brilliantly subtle device. This is truly a masterwork. It took me three years to track down a used copy of it, but it was worth the search. Absolutely magnificent. Recommended.
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