Das grüne Gesicht: Ein Roman by Gustav Meyrink

(6 User reviews)   1334
By Oscar Walker Posted on Feb 13, 2026
In Category - Folklore
Meyrink, Gustav, 1868-1932 Meyrink, Gustav, 1868-1932
German
Okay, I need to tell you about this book that's been haunting me. It's called 'The Green Face' by Gustav Meyrink. Imagine walking into a dusty, weird curio shop in Amsterdam after World War I, and the owner shows you a portrait with a face that seems to be alive and watching you. That's how it starts for the main character, Fortunat Hauberrisser. This isn't a simple ghost story. The green face becomes an obsession, pulling him into a world of strange spiritualists, shadowy secret societies, and visions of a future apocalypse. The book asks one huge, unsettling question: What if the end of the world isn't a physical event, but a spiritual one happening inside us? It's creepy, philosophical, and unlike anything else. If you like stories that mess with your head and make you question reality, you have to try this.
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Gustav Meyrink's The Green Face is a trip into the bizarre. Published in 1916, it feels both old and startlingly modern, a novel that blends horror, mysticism, and social satire.

The Story

The story follows Fortunat Hauberrisser, a man adrift in Amsterdam after the chaos of World War I. Seeking distraction, he wanders into the shop of the mysterious Chidher Green. There, he sees a portrait with a face of shifting, living green. This encounter throws his life off course. Hauberrisser gets tangled with a cast of odd characters: a group of spiritualists trying to contact the dead, members of a secretive society with dangerous knowledge, and prophets who speak of a coming catastrophe. The green face becomes a symbol, appearing in dreams and visions, pointing toward a looming end—not of cities, but of our shared sense of reality. The plot is less about chasing a villain and more about Hauberrisser's desperate search for meaning in a world that feels like it's spiritually cracking apart.

Why You Should Read It

This book grabbed me because it's so weirdly personal. It's not about monsters under the bed, but about the terror of your own mind unraveling. Meyrink creates an atmosphere so thick you can almost smell the canal fog and the dust in Green's shop. The characters are exaggerated, almost like caricatures, which makes the serious questions they wrestle with even more powerful. It's a book about collective trauma, the search for truth in a broken world, and the fear that the future might be stranger than any fiction. It asks what we hold onto when everything we thought was solid starts to melt away.

Final Verdict

The Green Face is perfect for readers who love atmospheric, brain-bending stories. If you enjoyed the dreamlike puzzles of Franz Kafka or the uncanny dread in the stories of H.P. Lovecraft, you'll find a kindred spirit in Meyrink. It's not a fast-paced thriller; it's a slow-burn, philosophical horror that sits with you long after you finish the last page. Be ready for a challenging, surreal, and utterly unique experience.



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Jessica Miller
10 months ago

Wow.

Andrew Torres
7 months ago

Surprisingly enough, it manages to explain difficult concepts in plain English. Exceeded all my expectations.

Deborah Hernandez
1 year ago

As someone who reads a lot, the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged. Exceeded all my expectations.

Thomas Lewis
1 year ago

Used this for my thesis, incredibly useful.

Mason Wilson
1 year ago

Recommended.

5
5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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