Ernst Junger (1895-1998), was born in Heidelberg and early on developed a fascination with war. As a teenager, he ran away to join the French Foreign Legion, then enlisted in the German Army of the first day of World War I. Junger's first book, Storm of Steel, provided a graphic account of his experiences of war. Junger kept his distance from the Nazis, and his 1939 novel On the Marble Cliffs presented an allegorical account of the destructive nature of Hitler's rule. One of the most controversial of twentieth-century German writers, Junger was the recipient of numerous literary prizes, and continued his career as a writer until his death at the age of 102.
"This pitch-black ending [of The Glass Bees] shows that Jünger
offers more to the modern reader than perverse echoes of German
history. The Glass Bees captures with uncommon precision the
psychology of acquiescence and abjection on which the sickening
miracles of technology depend. The Venus flytraps of social media
are a case in point; so is the heedless embrace of artificial
intelligence.…In the end, the technical almost inevitably wins out
over the human." —Alex Ross, New Yorker
"In scenes as harrowing and thought-disturbing as any created by
Karel Capek, George Orwell or Aldous Huxley, [Jünger] contributes
not only to prophetic and nihilistic literature but also to an
understanding of the inner and outer forces that shape many a man's
attitude toward tyranny." —The New York Times
"Jünger's language shimmers with icily brilliant cynicism. He
masters a style as hard and transparent as the insects of the
story's title." —The San Francisco Chronicle
"A fantastic, tightly compressed novel...a wonderfully provocative
fusion of fiction and philosophy." —The Atlantic
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