New England Review

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NER Classics | Friedrich Torberg: An Introduction | Scott Denham

May 1, 2015

Scott Denham’s essay, Friedrich Torberg: An Introduction appeared in NER 20.4 (1999):

Friedrich Torberg (1908—1979) was very much a part of the Prague and Viennese literary café scenes in the 1920s and 1930s. He wrote a wicked schoolboy novel, Der Schüler Gerber hat absolviert (Berlin, 1930) [The Examination (London, 1932)]—the only one of his works which appears to have been translated in English-which catapulted him into the limelight of the café Herrenhof scene of Max Brod, Ernst Polak, and Alfred Polgar; in Vienna he associated with Karl Kraus, Franz Werfel, Robert Musil, Hermann Broch, and others. Three more novels published before the war were all well-enough received, but did not succeed in getting the critics past their notion of him as a bad boy cynic and lampooner. 

[read more]

Filed Under: NER Classics Tagged With: Friedrich Torberg: An Introduction, NER Classics, Scott Denham


Vol. 43, No. 2

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NER Digital

Corey Van Landingham

Behind the Byline

Corey Van Landingham

NER Managing Editor Leslie Sainz talks with poet Corey Van Landingham about urgency and liberation in persona poetry, the character of silence, and her two poems in NER 43.2.

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