Rudolf Brunngraber (1901, Vienna – 1960) was an Austrian writer, journalist and painter who worked with Otto Neurath.[1] His novels were translated into eighteen languages, with more than a million books sold.[2]
Brunngraber's novel Radium was adapted for radio by Günter Eich in 1937.[3]
Works
edit- Karl und das 20. Jahrhundert. Roman, Frankfurt am Main: Societäts-Verlag, 1933. Translated by Eden and Cedar Paul as Karl and the twentieth century, 1933
- Radium; Roman eines Elements, Rowohlt, 1936. Translated by Eden and Cedar Paul as Radium; a novel, 1936.
- Die Engel in Atlantis, 1938.
- Opiumkrieg, roman, 1939.
- Zucker aus Cuba, roman eines goldrausches, 1941.
- Prozess auf Tod und Leben, 1948
- Heroin, 1951
References
edit- ^ Jon Hughes, 'Facts and Fiction: Rudolf Brunngraber, Otto Neurath, and Viennese Neue Sachlichkeit ', in Deborah Holmes & Lisa Silverman, eds., Interwar Vienna: culture between tradition and modernity, Camden House, 2009, pp.206-223
- ^ Christoph Fuchs, 'Rudolf Brunngraber, 1901–1960', Literatur und Kritik 317-18 (September 1997), pp.103-9
- ^ Neil H. Donahue, Doris Kirchner, Flight of fantasy: new perspectives on inner emigration in German literature, p.182