The Confessions of Felix Krull, Confidence Man, novel by Thomas Mann, originally published in German as Die Bekenntnisse des Hochstaplers Felix Krull in 1954; the first few chapters were published in 1922 as a short story.
The novel, which was unfinished at Mann’s death, is the story of a confidence man who wins the favour of others by performing the roles they desire of him. From childhood Krull lacks morality and has a masterful ability to play any part he desires. He avoids the draft by inducing symptoms of illness in himself and goes to work in a hotel as a pageboy. While there he manages to act as both servant and guest, having several escapades, including theft. He has an affair with Madame Houpflé and later agrees, for a considerable fee, to pose as the Marquis de Venosta. Going by the name Armand, Krull meets Professor Kuckuck on a train to Lisbon. The professor’s wife and daughter both yield to Krull’s charms. The story is a good example of Mann’s often-used theme of the immorality of the artist. Krull makes an art of his criminality and is motivated less by greed than by the sheer joy of a job well done. A deliberate parody, the novel is nonetheless a severely critical commentary on the modern bourgeoisie.