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Poetic dream that ended in nightmare
CALUM BARNES recommends an account of the tragic end of the brief period when writers took power in 1918 Bavaria
Utopian dreamer: Kurt Eisner

Dreamers
by Volker Weidermann
(Pushkin Press, £16.99)

PLATO infamously wanted to banish poets from his republic. What happens, though, when poets end up in charge of one? Volker Weidermann's Dreamers, a moving, novelistic retelling of the short-lived Bavarian Council Republic founded in 1918, provides an account of the time this briefly became a reality.

With a cast drawn from the pantheon of 20th century German writers, including Rainer Maria Rilke, Herman Hesse and Thomas Mann, it brilliantly resurrects an oft-forgotten episode when poets took power and were no longer merely the ”unacknowledged legislators of the world,” as Shelley once claimed.

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