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katrinepoetry 's review for:

The Sufferings of Young Werther by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
3.0

This is a book I've been wanting to read ever since I heard about it through a literature class many years ago - and finally, I got around to it (though I skipped the criticism).

Written in four weeks in the spring of 1774, the piece itself reflects the views on editing Goethe expresses in the story, claiming there is a certain vibrancy and urgency which can be lost if a story is over told or edited. I was also pleasantly surprised to encounter an argument for considering mental illness as an illness, considering this is a battle still being fought, in addition to the general horror stories you hear regarding mental illness dating back a few centuries.

Perhaps one of my favourite aspects of the novel was the format similarities it shared with other contemporary novels such as Frankenstein and Wieland - all written in a letter format - potentially proving its influence on the novels to be written in 1798 and 1818, both within Europe and across the Atlantic Ocean.

Granted, I can't really claim it was the most cheerful read, in particular considering its cultural effect at the time, sparking a chain of copycat suicides. Luckily, however, it's a short read. And in addition to being a classic in itself, it also lends insight into the Sturm und Drang period in Germany, know for representing extreme emotions (which this novel certainly did).