Malloy, Joseph 1991 0-88946-579-7 272 pages Will do much to improve the reputation of Constanze Mozart, who has been vilified as having been an unworthy wife to one of the greatest musical geniuses of all time and has been blamed for his poverty and his less-than-glorious, premature death. Although a work of fiction and historical surmise, Diez' Constanze, Formerly Widow of Mozart stays close enough to the sparse biographical details of Constanze's life that the book has a tone of veracity and authenticity that is augmented by Malloy's footnotes and afterword.
Van Cleve, John W. 2024 1-4955-1308-4 192 pages The Fables and Tales and the Swedish Countess were
ensconced in the German canon of literature well into the
nineteenth century. But Gellert’s renown faded in the twentieth,
a development that can be traced in part to the profound
disillusionment and cynicism that set in after the World Wars
and the Holocaust. It is understandable that the continent that
produced philosophical optimism in the eighteenth century and
Auschwitz in the twentieth would find much of the thinking of
Enlightenment figures like Gellert naïve, even passé.
Saxony was one of the many states large and small that
belonged to the vast and slowly failing Holy Roman Empire of
the German Nation, the capital of which was Vienna.