Author:
Frederic Morton
On
January 30,
1889, at the
champagne-splashed
height of
the Viennese
Carnival,
the handsome
and charming
Crown Prince
Rudolf fired
a revolver
at his teenaged
mistress and
then himself.
The two shots
that rang out
at Mayerling
in the Vienna
Woods echo
still.
Morton
deftly tells
the haunting
story of the
Prince and
his city,
where, in
the span of
only ten months, "the
Western dream
started to
go wrong." In
Rudolf's Vienna
moved other
young men
with striking
intellectual
and artistic
talents—and
all as frustrated
as the Prince.
Among them
were: young
Sigmund Freud,
Gustav Mahler,
Theodor Herzl,
Gustav Klimt,
and the playwright
Arthur Schnitzler,
whose La Ronde
was the great
erotic drama
of the fin
de siecle.
Morton studies
these and
other gifted
young men,
interweaving
their fates
with that
of the doomed
Prince and
the entire
city through
to the eve
of Easter,
just after
Rudolf's body is
lowered into
its permanent
sarcophagus
and a son
named Adolf
Hitler is
born to Frau
Klara Hitler.