Immagine dell'autore.

Robert Neumann (1) (1897–1975)

Autore di The Pictorial History of the Third Reich

Per altri autori con il nome Robert Neumann, vedi la pagina di disambiguazione.

39 opere 227 membri 4 recensioni

Opere di Robert Neumann

RAGAZZI DI VIENNA (1947) 23 copie
By the Waters of Babylon (1944) 11 copie
L' Inchiesta (1950) 7 copie
Olympia (1961) 4 copie
Mammon (1932) 3 copie
Festival (1962) 3 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1897-05-22
Data di morte
1975-01-03
Luogo di sepoltura
Haidhausener Friedhof, München, Germany
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
Österreich-Ungarn (Geburt)
Großbritannien (ab 1947)
Luogo di nascita
Vienna, Austria
Luogo di morte
Munich, Germany
Luogo di residenza
London, England, UK
Locarno, Switzerland
Attività lavorative
writer
satirist
playwright
autobiographer
novelist
screenwriter (mostra tutto 8)
poet
literary critic
Relazioni
Linke, Lilo (friend)
Organizzazioni
Deutsche Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung
Austrian PEN
Breve biografia
Robert Neumann was born in Vienna, Austria, to a family of Jewish ancestry. He studied chemistry and literature in Vienna, and obtained a Ph.D. with a thesis on Heinrich Heine. After losing money in the post-World War I Depression, he worked at various jobs, including seaman. In 1919, he married Stefanie Grünwald, with whom he had a son. He published some early poetry in 1919 and 1923, and established his literary reputation with the satire collection Mit fremden Federn (With Borrowed Plumes) in 1927. He quickly published other works, including the anti-Nazi novels Sintflut (1929) and Die Macht (Mammon, 1932), and another book of parodies, Unter falscher Flagge (Under False Flag, 1932). In addition, he lectured and worked as a literary critic for German-language periodicals. His books were banned and burned by the German Nazi regime in 1933 and that year he left Austria for exile in the UK. In 1936 he wrote the screenplay for the British film Abdul the Damned. After the Anschluss (annexation) of Austria by Germany in 1938, he organized the Free Austrian PEN Club in London to help writers threatened by the Nazis to leave their country. After the start of World War II, he was interned for a few months as an "enemy alien." Beginning with Scene in Passing in 1942, he published three novels in his adopted language of English. As an editor and part owner of a publishing house, he published translations that introduced the British public to German writers in exile such as Arnold Zweig and Heinrich Mann. In 1947, he was named honorary president of the revived Austrian PEN Club. After divorce from his first wife, he remarried to Lore Franziska Stern (Rolly Becker), a German writer and translator, and then to Evelyn Hengerer, a dancer known as Mathilde Walewska, with whom he had another son. After 1958, he lived in Switzerland, where he continued to work as a novelist, political journalist and literary critic, producing several works on the Holocaust. In 1960, he married his fourth wife, Helga Heller. He wrote an autobiography, Mein altes Haus in Kent, published in 1957.

Utenti

Recensioni

Uno sguardo straziante alla realtà vissuta dai piccoli protagonisti in una Vienna martoriata dalla guerra e dall'intolleranza nazista. Riga dopo riga, il cuore si aggrappa alla speranza di un "eroe" che potrebbe salvarli e per mesi la nostra affettività resta incollata ad ogni sussurro, pianto, fame, paura e desiderio di quelli che saranno, per sempre, "i nostri bambini".
 
Segnalato
lapepi | Jan 18, 2017 |

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Statistiche

Opere
39
Utenti
227
Popolarità
#99,086
Voto
½ 3.7
Recensioni
4
ISBN
42
Lingue
4

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