In the Future of Yesterday

A Life of Stefan Zweig

Rüdiger Görner author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Haus Publishing

Published:9th Oct '25

Should be back in stock very soon

In the Future of Yesterday cover

STEFAN ZWEIG WAS ONE OF EUROPE’S MOST POPULAR WRITERS OF THE EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY AND IS NOW TRANSLATED INTO OVER THIRTY LANGUAGES. 

All his works have been recently re-published by Pushkin Press.

Potential endorsements by Oliver Matuschek, Joseph Epstein and George Prochnik

Potential reviews by the TLS, LRB and Literary Review. 

In the Future of Yesterday offers a refreshing approach to the life and work of Austrian writer Stefan Zweig and delves into his considerable contribution to world literature, rooted in the Austro-Jewish tradition.

In the Future of Yesterday offers a refreshing approach to the life and work of Austrian writer Stefan Zweig, delving into his considerable contribution to world literature, rooted in the Austro-Jewish tradition.


A world traveller from the outset, Zweig liked to uproot himself – but whether he stayed in London, New York, or eventually Brazil, his literary baggage continued to contain the flair of fin de siècle Vienna.


Looking anew at Zweig’s influential time in England and offering fresh insights into his final years in the United States and Brazil, Görner discusses Zweig’s prolific literary output in relation to his life and treats his political views on Europe, Zionism, and the world order with great depth and scrutiny.


Most importantly, In the Future of Yesterday shows Zweig as a towering figure of a form of writing that was bursting with life and was written in the knowledge that there can only be a future if we remain conscious of the past.

‘Rüdiger Görner’s In the Future of Yesterday: A Life of Stefan Zweig is an elegant and compassionate look at the contrasts, aspirations and disasters of its subject’s age. ’

-- The Wall Street Journal

In the Future of Yesterday provides a delightful appreciation of his life and work.’

-- Times Literary Supple

ISBN: 9781914979347

Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 35mm

Weight: 496g

480 pages