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Promoted ContentFebruary 1996
Warschauer Tagebuch
Die Monate davor. 1978–1981
by Kazimierz Brandys, Friedrich Griese, Konstanty Aleksander Jeleński
Das im Oktober 1978 begonnene Tagebuch Kazimierz Brandys' endet am 13. Dezember 1981 mit der Eintragung: Nachricht von der Verhängung des Kriegszustandes in Polen. Alle Verbindungen abgebrochen. Einer der führenden Schriftsteller Polens notiert in diesem Buch, was sich in den Monaten davor ereignet hat: die äußeren und offiziellen, die inneren und privaten Geschehnisse.
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Trusted PartnerApril 1995
Polen zwischen Ost und West
Polnische Essays des 20. Jahrhunderts. Eine Anthologie
by Ulrike Bischoff, Karl Dedecius, Friedrich Griese, Martina Hassenstein, Ursula Kiermeier, Marek Klecel, Marek Klecel, Winfried Lipscher, Renate Schmidgall, Klaus Staemmler, Karin L. Wolff
Brzozowski, Stanisl#/aw: Die Menschheit und das Volk. Witkiewicz, Stanisl#/aw I.: Der verfluchte Sarmate. Gombrowicz, Witold: Fratze und Gesicht. Szczepánski, Jan Józef: Der Heilige. Bl#/on#(ski, Jan: Die armen Polen blicken aufs Getto. Stempowski, Jerzy: Die Polen in den Romanen Dostojewskijs. Herling-Grudzin#(ski: Mit den Augen Conrads. Mackiewicz, Józef: Der sogenannte Osten Europas. Czapski, Józef: Nationalität oder Einseitigkeit. Mil#/osz, Czesl#/aw: An Tomas Venclova. Wittlin, Józef: Zur Verteidigung deutscher Bücher. Micin#(ski, Boleslaw: Antwort auf einen Brief des römischen Bürgers Francesco. Wyka, Kazimierz: Faust auf Ruinen. Jastrun, Mieczysl#/aw: Den Göttern gleich. Kijowski, Andrzej: Deutsche, Polen und andere. Vincenz, Stanisl#/aw: Über die Möglichkeiten der Verbreitung polnischer Kultur und Literatur. Kott, Jan: Polnische Diaspora. Kubiak, Zygmunt: Isolation oder Kraft.
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Trusted Partner
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Trusted Partner
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March 2016
Literary Travel Guide Upper Silesia
Five Tours through a baroque, (post)industrial, green and mystical Borderland
by Marcin Wiatr
Upper Silesia – a region in Poland with an eventful past, characterized by diverse cultures which influence each other and overlap. Here people live together, who feel themselves as Polish, German or Upper Silesian. Impulses for regional identity gives the multilingual literature. Here Joseph von Eichendorff, Max Herrmann-Neisse and Horst Bienek were born. Also Janosch has set a literary monument to his homeland, Tadeusz Różewicz lived and wrote here, Jaromír Nohavica sang about the region and director Kazimierz Kutz captured it in a film trilogy. The book literarily presents Upper Silesian places like Neisse/Nysa, Gleiwitz/Gliwice, Myslowitz/Mysłowice, Lubowitz/Łubowice and St. Annaberg/Góra Świętej Anny by examples of location, architecture, industry, landscape and mysticism.
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September 2019
When Hell Struck Twelve
A Billy Boyle WWII Mystery
by James R. Benn
In the 14th Billy Boyle mystery, US Army detective Billy Boyle and Lieutenant Kazimierz travel into the heart of Nazi-occupied Paris on a dangerous mission: ensure a traitor to the French Resistance unwittingly carries out a high-stakes deception campaign. August, 1944: US Army detective Billy Boyle is assigned to track down a French traitor, code-named Atlantik, who is delivering classified Allied plans to German leaders in occupied Paris. The Resistance is also hot on his trail and out for blood, after Atlantik’s previous betrayals led to the death of many of their members. But the plans Atlantik carries were leaked on purpose, a ruse devised to obscure the Allied army’s real intentions to bypass Paris in a race to the German border. Now Billy and Kaz are assigned to the Resistance with orders to not let them capture the traitor: the deception campaign is too important. Playing a delicate game, the chase must be close enough to spur the traitor on and visible enough to ensure the Germans trust Atlantik. The outcome of the war may well depend on it.
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September 2020
The Red Horse
(A Billy Boyle WWII Mystery)
by James R. Benn
Just days after the Liberation of Paris, US Army Detective Billy Boyle and Lieutenant Kazimierz are brought to Saint Albans Convalescent Hospital in the English countryside. Kaz has been diagnosed with a heart condition, and Billy is dealing with emotional exhaustion and his recent methamphetamine abuse. Meanwhile, Billy’s love, Diana Seaton, has been taken to Ravensbrück, the Nazi concentration camp for women, and Kaz’s sister, Angelika, who he recently learned was alive and working with the Polish Underground, has also been captured and transported to the same camp. This news is brought by British Major Cosgrove, who asks Billy for help, unofficially, in solving what he thinks was the murder of a British agent recuperating at Saint Albans. The convalescent hospital is really a secret installation for those in the world of clandestine warfare to recover from wounds, physical and emotional. Some are allowed to leave; others are deemed security risks and are detained there. When a second body is found, it is evident that a killer is at work in this high-security enclave. Now Billy must carry out his covert investigation while maintaining his tenuous recovery, shielding his actions from suspicious hospital authorities, and dodging the unknown murderer.
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November 2018
It's burning. Mordechai Gebirtig, the father of Yiddish Song
Es brennt. Mordechai Gebirtig, Vater des jiddischen Liedes
by Uwe von Seltmann
This is the first biography of Yiddish poet and songwriter Mordechai Gebirtig (1877–1942) in the past twenty years, in addition, the first in German and, in the case of a translation, the very first in English. It’s burning is a comprehensive book based on the latest knowledge about this icon of Yiddish culture and chronicler of the Shoah, full of important new discoveries. In addition to Gebirtig’s life and work, this biography covers a wide range of topics – from the Yiddish language to the city of Krakow and East Jewish music, culture and history. It is richly illustrated with more than 200 photographs, facsimiles and time-related documents.