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Book cover of Correspondencia by Stefan Zweig

Correspondencia

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Author:

Stefan Zweig

Number Of Reads:

29

Language:

es

Category:

History

Section:

Pages:

490

Quality:

excellent

Views:

811

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Book Description

El 24 de julio de 1912, Friderike von Winternitz visitó Viena y pasó la velada en la fonda Riedhof, un local frecuentado por funcionarios, oficiales, médicos y escritores, en el que vio a Stefan Zweig. Al día siguiente, Friderike le escribió una carta anónima con la que comenzaba no sólo su relación amorosa, sino una correspondencia que se prolongó durante veinte años, hasta el suicidio del escritor en plena Segunda Guerra Mundial. Estas cartas son un extraordinario testimonio del profundo vínculo que unió al escritor y a su primera esposa durante su vida en común y tras el divorcio, y un conmovedor documento de las vidas truncadas en la Europa devastada por la barbarie nazi.

Author portrait of Stefan Zweig

Stefan Zweig

Stefan Zweig (1881-1942) was an Austrian writer of Jewish descent. A distinguished Austrian writer and one of the most prominent writers in Europe at the beginning of the last century, he was famous for his extensive studies dealing with the lives of famous writers such as: Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Balzac and Roman Rolland. Tightness in the lives of these notorious celebrities. Stefan Zweig has written many plays, novels and articles. His autobiographical work "Yesterday's World" was published to him after his suicide. He obtained British citizenship after the Nazis took power in Germany. He has lived on the move in South America since 1940. Among his well-known novels are: 24 Hours in the Life of a Woman, and Beware of Pity, Builders of the World. Stefan decided to get rid of life while witnessing the collapse of world peace and the scourge of World War II. I did it without fear and did not forget to thank the government of Brazil, where he committed suicide for the hospitality and care, knowing that the late had obtained British citizenship shortly before his suicide. A farewell letter, including a letter to his first wife, after which Stefan Zweig and his second wife entered the bedroom and in one moment swallowed dozens of sleeping pills and embraced tenderly and hugged. The next day, the servants of the house broke into the bedroom because they were late in waking up to find the writer and his wife had died. In an eternal embrace and without making a fuss, the writer did not forget to give his pampered dog a large dose of hypnotics, so he slept in turn in front of the bedroom door.

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