Death in Venice

Death in Venice is a 1912 novella written by German author Thomas Mann (original title "Der Tod in Venedig"). The story is about an aged author who travels to Venice and falls in love with a stunningly good-looking aristocratic fourteen-year-old boy, to whom he never speaks.

The novella is highly autobiographical: while holidaying in Venice, thirty-seven-year-old Mann, a married father, had crushed from afar on a ten-year-old Polish aristocrat, Wladyslaw Moes. Benjamin Britten has adapted this into an opera.

This work provides examples of:

 * Blue Blood
 * Long-Haired Pretty Boy
 * Longing Look
 * Lover and Beloved
 * Love At First Sight
 * Love Epiphany
 * Love Makes You Crazy
 * Love Makes You Evil
 * Stalking Is Love
 * Stalker with a Crush
 * Unresolved Sexual Tension
 * What Beautiful Eyes!