“Heidegger’s letters to his wife are a revelation. They offer privileged access to the innermost reaches of Heidegger’s thought. Moreover, here, perhaps for the first time, Heidegger the fallible individual is fully on display. These fascinating letters reveal Heidegger’s exalted sense of the world-historical mission of philosophy, as well as his own immodest estimation of his standing. This rich correspondence should be required reading for anyone interested in the vital intersection between biography and the history of ideas.”
Richard Wolin, City University of New York
“Can a philosopher’s life illuminate his thinking? Heidegger is not encouraging, writing of Aristotle: ‘He was born, worked, and died.’ Yet in these letters to Elfride, his thinking, tribulations and passions bleed together, exploding any such parsimony. They bear intimate witness to everyday life chez Heidegger, and offer a riveting glimpse of an often unequal struggle with his wife over the meaning of marriage, love and truth.”
David Wood, Vanderbilt University
Translated by Rupert Glasgow