Das rasende Leben: Zwei Novellen by Kasimir Edschmid

(7 User reviews)   1550
By Matthew Hoffmann Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - The High Shelf
Edschmid, Kasimir, 1890-1966 Edschmid, Kasimir, 1890-1966
German
Hey, I just read this wild little book from 1920s Germany that feels like it could have been written yesterday. It's called 'Das rasende Leben' (The Raging Life) and it's actually two novellas in one. Forget everything you think you know about stuffy German literature—this thing moves. The first story follows a young man who inherits a fortune and decides to burn through it as fast as humanly possible, chasing every thrill he can find. It's a full-on sprint toward self-destruction, and you're just waiting to see if he crashes or finds something real in all that chaos. The second story is quieter but just as intense, about an artist who tries to escape his own fame and talent by hiding out in a small town. Both are about people running—either toward something or away from something—and what happens when you can't run anymore. It's surprisingly modern, a bit manic, and totally gripping.
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If you're looking for a calm, gentle read, look elsewhere. Kasimir Edschmid's 'Das rasende Leben' is a double shot of pure, early 20th-century adrenaline. Written in the 1920s, it captures that post-WWI feeling where the old rules were gone and everyone was trying to figure out what came next, often at breakneck speed.

The Story

The book is split into two parts. The first novella, 'The Raging Life,' is exactly what it sounds like. A young man suddenly comes into a massive inheritance. Instead of settling down, he makes it his mission to spend it all. We follow him on a whirlwind tour of Europe's hotspots—casinos, nightclubs, romantic flings. It's a non-stop party, but there's a desperate edge to it. He's not just having fun; he's trying to feel something, anything, before the money and maybe his life runs out.

The second story, 'The Last Act,' shifts gears. It's about a famous playwright who's exhausted by his own success. He flees to a quiet village, hoping to disappear and find some peace. But of course, you can't outrun yourself. His past and his identity have a way of catching up, forcing him to confront what he's really trying to escape.

Why You Should Read It

What struck me most was how current these stories feel. That urge to live fast and burn bright? The pressure to be someone and the equal desire to be no one? Edschmid nails it. His writing isn't flowery; it's sharp and direct, pulling you right into the character's frantic headspace. You feel the dizzying highs of the spender's escapades and the claustrophobic quiet of the artist's retreat. They're two sides of the same coin: what do you do when the life you've built (or fallen into) doesn't fit anymore?

Final Verdict

This one's perfect for readers who like their classics with a side of restless energy. If you enjoyed the frantic pace of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 'The Beautiful and Damned' or the existential mood of early 20th-century modernism, you'll find a kindred spirit in Edschmid. It's a short, powerful book that asks big questions about money, art, and identity without ever slowing down to give you easy answers. A brilliant, breathless glimpse into a world trying to outrun its own ghosts.



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Christopher Lee
1 year ago

Clear and concise.

John King
5 months ago

As someone who reads a lot, it manages to explain difficult concepts in plain English. A valuable addition to my collection.

5
5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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