Satan and Iscariot : Book 1-3

In Satan and Iscariot I, Karl May opens one of his most ambitious late adventure narratives, following Old Shatterhand across the American frontier in a tale shaped by pursuit, disguise, moral conflict, and the struggle between Christian virtue and calculated evil. Like May's best-known travel romances, the novel combines rapid episodic action with exoticized geography and ethnographic detail, yet it also bears the weightier ethical and allegorical design of his mature work. The title itself signals this seriousness: "Satan" and "Iscariot" evoke not merely villains, but treachery, corruption, and spiritual testing within the popular adventure form. May, one of the most widely read German-language storytellers of the nineteenth century, wrote many of his frontier and Orient novels before personally visiting the regions he described, relying instead on maps, travel accounts, and an extraordinary narrative imagination. His fiction reflects both the imperial-era fascination with distant worlds and his own moral didacticism, shaped by a troubled early life, imprisonment, and later self-fashioning as a prophetic author of ethical adventure. This volume will especially reward readers interested in the intersection of popular literature, mythic heroism, and nineteenth-century German ideas about justice, redemption, and civilization. It is recommended not only as thrilling entertainment, but as a revealing artifact of its literary and cultural moment.

Over dit boek

In Satan and Iscariot I, Karl May opens one of his most ambitious late adventure narratives, following Old Shatterhand across the American frontier in a tale shaped by pursuit, disguise, moral conflict, and the struggle between Christian virtue and calculated evil. Like May's best-known travel romances, the novel combines rapid episodic action with exoticized geography and ethnographic detail, yet it also bears the weightier ethical and allegorical design of his mature work. The title itself signals this seriousness: "Satan" and "Iscariot" evoke not merely villains, but treachery, corruption, and spiritual testing within the popular adventure form. May, one of the most widely read German-language storytellers of the nineteenth century, wrote many of his frontier and Orient novels before personally visiting the regions he described, relying instead on maps, travel accounts, and an extraordinary narrative imagination. His fiction reflects both the imperial-era fascination with distant worlds and his own moral didacticism, shaped by a troubled early life, imprisonment, and later self-fashioning as a prophetic author of ethical adventure. This volume will especially reward readers interested in the intersection of popular literature, mythic heroism, and nineteenth-century German ideas about justice, redemption, and civilization. It is recommended not only as thrilling entertainment, but as a revealing artifact of its literary and cultural moment.

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