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4 result(s) for "Authors, Austrian 20th century Correspondence."
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Stefan and Lotte Zweig's South American letters : New York, Argentina and Brazil, 1940-42
The previously unpublished letters of a major 20th-century writer and his wife. Forseeing Nazi Germany's domination of Europe, Stefan Zweig left Austria in 1933. In 1941, following a lecture tour of South America and several months in New York, he and his wife Lotte emigrated to Brazil. They committed suicide together in 1942.
Letters to Milena
In no other work does Franz Kafka reveal himself as in Letters to Milena, which begins as a business correspondence but soon develops into a passionate but doomed epistolary love affair. Kafka's Czech translator, Milena Jesenská, was a gifted and charismatic twenty-three-year-old who was uniquely able to recognize Kafka's complex genius and his even more complex character. For thirty-six-year-old Kafka, she was \"a living fire, such as I have never seen.\" It was to Milena that he revealed his most intimate self and, eventually, entrusted his diaries for safekeeping.