The Goose Man

audiobook

The Goose Man

by Jakob Wassermann

EN·~18 hours·17 chapters

Chapters

17 total
1

The GOOSE MAN

0:39
2

THE GOOSE MAN - A MOTHER SEEKS HER SON - I

51:27
3

FOES, BROTHERS, A FRIEND AND A MASK - I

49:05
4

THE NERO OF TO-DAY - I

51:55
5

INSPECTOR JORDAN AND HIS CHILDREN - I

1:14:57
6

VOICES FROM WITHOUT AND VOICES FROM WITHIN - I

1:02:24
7

IN MEMORY OF A DREAM FIGURE - I

1:10:44
8

DANIEL AND GERTRUDE - I

59:31
9

THE GLASS CASE BREAKS - I

1:01:03
10

TRES FACIUNT COLLEGIUM - I

1:23:48

Description

In a quiet German village framed by dense conifer forests and winding rivers, a humble weaver named Gottfried Nothafft and his wife Marian endure the slow erosion of their craft as American power looms flood the market. Their modest home, tucked near the old stone inn, bears the weight of tradition while the world beyond their moss‑covered walls races toward mechanized efficiency. As their livelihood falters, the couple’s deepest wish—to bring a son into their lives—remains unfulfilled, casting a lingering melancholy over their daily toil.

When the relentless tide of industrial change finally reaches Eschenbach, Gottfried’s shop empties and the couple confronts both poverty and a growing resentment toward the cold, steel machines that threaten their way of life. Amid this turmoil, Marian discovers she is finally carrying a child, a fragile hope that flickers against the backdrop of hardship. Their story unfolds in a richly detailed portrait of a vanished era, where personal yearning collides with the unstoppable march of progress.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~18 hours (1084K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Markus Brenner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2008-05-06

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Jakob Wassermann

Jakob Wassermann

1873–1934

A bestselling German-language novelist of the early 20th century, he was drawn to moral conflict, mystery, and questions of identity. His fiction reached a huge audience in the 1920s, and his life as a German Jew gave added force to his writing about belonging and exclusion.

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