

The meet in a monastery (after the death of Goldmund's mother). This novel is about two medieval men with a very deep friendship but with very different temperaments. It is very Existential in some ways, but touches on the mystical in the arts with a more profound effect than the more "metaphysical" manner of the earlier novels. It has drama, insight, poetic vision and covers a wide range of experiences.

Like all of Hesse's novels, it is about the the pursuit of the meaning of life, but here the writing is less self-conscious, simpler in some ways, but deeper in the exploring the range of human experience. But of all of Hesse's work, it is Narcissus and Goldmund that moved me most deeply and it is the novel (of Hesse's) to which I have returned to most often.

I read and reread all of his better known novels and found them all worthwhile. In my college years, Hermann Hesse was one author considered required reading by my peers. My favorite of Hesse's novels, wonderfully read.
