As part of the 7th Bamberg Literature Festival, more than 30 events will take place in the city and communities of the district of Bamberg from May 5th to June 3rd, 2022. As in previous years, the exquisite program includes readings by virtuoso authors and exciting and unique guided tours and walks, which this year, on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of ETA Hoffmann's death, pay special attention to his footsteps in Bamberg.
As usual, the children's events will also have a special place this year in order to offer little literature lovers a colorful and equally informative and varied program.
All visitors can look forward to outstanding events that have been designed professionally and with great sensitivity within the framework of the applicable hygiene regulations. This was based on the current 2G+ regulation.
On behalf of the district of Bamberg as the organizer, the Bamberger Literaturfestival UG (consisting of the city marketing of Bamberg, the event service of Bamberg and the bookshop Osiander) is responsible for the planning and implementation of the readings in cooperation with the St. Michaelsbund Bamberg.
Tickets have been available from February 2, 2022 at all known advance booking offices, in all common advance booking systems, by telephone on the hotline 0951 - 23837 or at www.kartenkiosk-bamberg.de.
Further information about the program is available at www.bamlit.de.
The 2022 program
Dirk Steffens: Projekt ZukunftThursday, May 5, 2022, 8 p.m., Kulturboden Hallstadt
Dirk Steffens, the well-known Terra-X moderator and conservationist, deals in his new book with topics from the fields of nature, environment, technology and science that are burning on our nails. Together with a number of bright minds such as Harald Lesch, Antje Boëtius or Mojib Latif, he discusses the effects of species extinction, the benefits and damage of agriculture, the state of the seas, the future nature of our forests, the future of human intelligence, the climate crisis and the effects our consumption. He creates connections, weighs pros and cons, avoids simple answers and questions apparent certainties. "Can nuclear power stop climate change?" is just one of those exciting questions that affect us all because they help determine what our future looks like.
Tanja Kinkel & guests: Was Kater Murr friends with the dog Berganza? Thursday, May 12, 2022, 8 p.m., Kulturboden Hallstadt
Find out, among other things, how ETA Hoffmann successfully defended a whistleblower against the Prussian army, how one becomes a Serapion brother, who would win in a Nutcracker vs. Sandman fight, and why it is better not to drink the elixirs of the devil.
Antje Rávik Strubel: Blue WomanFriday, May 13, 2022, 8 p.m., E-Werk Bamberg
Adina grew up as the last teenager in her village in the Czech Giant Mountains and even as a child she longed to travel far away. With her, Antje Rávik Strubel takes up a character from her early novel »Unter Schnee«. Adina is now 20 years old and during a language course in Berlin she meets the photographer Rickie, who arranges an internship for her in a new culture center in the Uckermark. Made invisible by a sexual assault that nobody takes seriously, Adina ends up stranded in Helsinki after an odyssey. In the hotel where she works illegally, she meets the Estonian professor Leonides, MEP, who falls in love with her. While he is campaigning for human rights, Adina is looking for a way out of inner exile. »Blaue Frau« tells a stirring story about the unequal conditions of love, the abysses of Europe and how we make the outrageous normal.
Literary treasures by ETA Hoffmann: Guided tour of the State LibrarySaturday, May 14, 2022, 1 p.m. and 3 p.m., Bamberg State Library
The Bamberg State Library keeps one of the largest collections on ETA Hoffmann in Germany. In addition to original manuscripts by the romantic writer, composer and draftsman, the inventory also includes numerous modern illustrated editions of Hoffmann's works. A selection will be presented at the presentation in the reading room of the State Library.
Günther Koch & Jörg Roth: We call GükoSaturday, May 14, 2022, 8 p.m., Lechner-Bräu community center in Baunach
Günther Koch's radio reports from Champions League games and his appearances in the ARD Bundesliga final conference are legendary. Even Cologne, HSV and Hertha fans recognize his voice immediately. »Hello, this is Nuremberg! We'll get in touch from the abyss!«: These two sentences from the last match day of the 1998/99 Bundesliga season have entered the collective football memory, just like Koch's report on the first Bundesliga ghost game in 2004 between Alemannia Aachen and 1. FC Nürnberg. Jürgen Roth knows Günther Koch for more than twenty years, he had intensive discussions with him for this book, accompanied him to FCN training and to tours of the stadium. And he also captured the voices of the so-called normal fans and many prominent companions.
In this way, »We report from the abyss« traces the life of a man possessed and a side entrant to the football business and is at the same time a kaleidoscope of different attitudes towards this sport: a mosaic of life history, reportage, oral history and media history that paints a vivid picture of the post-war period up until today conveys the present and tells a life for football that is exemplary for the history of the Federal Republic.
Thomas Kraft: Time of ScarsSaturday, May 14, 2022, 8 p.m., OSIANDER Bamberg
A film project takes two journalists to Ghana to see the notorious slave forts on the Gold Coast. There they come across the story of Hanna Reitsch, »Hitler's aviator«, who promoted the use of suicide pilots towards the end of World War II and set up a gliding school for the controversial President Kwame Nkrumah in Ghana in the 1960s. An attack on the two journalists in a hotel complex makes it clear that this research should be prevented. In his new novel (Conte Verlag), Thomas Kraft tells of the largely unknown German colonial history in Ghana, of war victims and war trauma, and of the strategies of the New Right, which cleverly seek to tie in with past times.
ETA Hoffmann afternoon: With Nevfel Cumart & OrchestraSunday, May 15, 2022, 3 p.m., ETA Hoffmann-Gymnasium Bamberg
Ernst Theodor Amadeus Hoffmann, composer and one of the most well-known authors of the Romantic period, came to Bamberg as Kapellmeister in 1808 and spent two years of his life here. To mark the 200th anniversary of his death, the Bamberg Literature Festival, in cooperation with the ETA Hoffmann Gymnasium, is organizing an afternoon with excerpts from Hoffmann's works and musical accompaniment. It will be exciting for the visitors: Nevfel Cumart will give an insight into Hoffmann's literary work with gripping texts by the poet. The young musicians from the high school of the same name want to comment on the text passages with effective intermezzi and thus bring the characters of the stories to life. We cordially invite you to a joint literary and musical journey through time to the 19th century!
Stefan Aust: Time travel Sunday, May 15, 2022, 7 p.m., Kulturboden Hallstadt
"It became clearer to me with each passing day what a privilege it was to be, as I used to like to say, 'a kind of journalist,' standing on the sidelines of history."
Few people have been at the center of the great historical events of the past decades as often as Stefan Aust. His autobiography is also a look back at his journalistic work, here you not only follow the stations of an eventful life, but also get deeper insights into his research. This creates a panorama of German and international politics; it is a contemporary testimony, background report and the adventure story of a very exciting life at the same time.
Anne Gesthuysen: After all, we are whoMonday, May 16, 2022, 8 p.m., Buchenwelt ERTL Hallstadt
About a young pastor on the Lower Rhine who stirs up her congregation, about the growing up of two dissimilar sisters in aristocratic circles and about the courage it takes to shape your own life when everything seems predetermined. The citizens of the municipality of Alpen are skeptical when Anna von Betteray takes over the representation of the sick pastor. After all, she's divorced, blue-blooded, in her mid-thirties much too young for the job and a woman. The only man at her side: her dog Freddy. While Anna tries to come to terms with a dark chapter in her past and carefully modernize the community, her sister Maria's life gets completely out of whack. Her husband is arrested and her son disappears shortly afterwards. She of all people, who in the eyes of her class-conscious mother was the model daughter who was crowned queen at shooting matches and married a count, while Anna played in the stable with dirty pants and fell in love with the wrong men. Only in times of need do the sisters overcome their differences - and receive support from surprising quarters. Because when it comes to finding a little boy, the Alpener stick together. And above all: Ottilie Oymann from the Burg Winnenthal retirement home!
Edgar Selge: Have you finally found us Tuesday, May 17, 2022, 8 p.m., Bamberg Concert Hall
Edgar Selge's literary debut: A twelve-year-old tells his story between prison walls and classical music. Exemplary and radically personal.
A childhood around 1960, in a city, not big, not small. A middle-class household where a lot of music is made. The father is a prison warden. Not long after the war, the parents are trying to make up for what they call their lost years through devotion to classical music and literature. Everywhere the boy feels cracks in this orderly world. Spellbound, he follows the political arguments that his older brothers are having with their father and mother at the dining table. But he remains a spectator. More and more often he takes refuge in the world of fantasy. This boy, whom the author regards as a distant brother of himself, tells us about his life while discovering his own way of looking at the world. When the seventy-three-year-old Edgar Selge occasionally interjects himself, it becomes clear: the shadows of the war generation reach into the present.
Edgar Selge's tone of voice is breathless, physical, risky. Full of wit and musicality. Whether Bach or Beethoven, Schubert or Dvořák, march music or gospel: the music overlays the story like a second story and accompanies the unwavering urge for freedom.
Sarah Straub: How my grandmother lost her IWednesday, May 18, 2022, 8 p.m., Dr. Robert Pfleger Bamberg
In her first book "How my grandmother lost her ego", Sarah Straub shows in many examples what it means when forgetfulness turns into dementia, what tasks, but also help options are associated with this diagnosis. She writes how everyday life with a person suffering from dementia can be regulated and how the final stage of this disease can be shaped with dignity: "I learned that people often have to endure months or even years of odysseys from doctor to doctor before they see the right specialist will. I learned that our healthcare system is not designed to ensure that those affected can live a dignified life in every case. I learned that this disease has dramatic consequences for entire families.” She describes in a sensitive and concrete way how everyday life with dementia patients can be regulated, for example when driving a car becomes dangerous, when personal hygiene decreases or falls become more frequent.
Sarah Straub also allows a look behind the facades of the clinics and explains why it is still so difficult for research to find a cure. And so "How my grandmother lost her self" is also a sensitively written guide that helps to shape the course, but also the final stage of this disease, for patients and their families with dignity.
Max Goldt: Reads Thursday, May 19, 2022, Dr. Robert Pfleger Bamberg
Every good person between Passau and Flensburg knows that Max Goldt's work is very funny. However, if one reads it carefully, it is one of the finest works that our literature has to offer, that it contains true wonders of elegance and poetry and that the most precise composition and a dazzlingly bright moral intelligence are hidden behind its deceptive flights of thought always many who are just out for a laugh and punch lines. Max Goldt deserves to be read, praised and awarded. – Daniel Kehlmann
Pointing out the ambiguities in the systematics of things is just one of the honorable tasks to which the German columnist Max Goldt has dedicated himself. Hardly anyone understands like Goldt how to put the supposed side scenes of life in the eye of the beholder and to scan today's everyday life for its contradictions and curiosities. – Regula Fuchs, The Bund, Bern (CH)
Heike Mallad & Captain Holz: "Get in!" Thursday, May 19, 2022, 8 p.m., Club Kaulberg Bamberg
A total of twelve songs and twelve chapters tell the story of Hansi, who was a big folk festival fan even as a boy and admired the colorful lights and colors at the fair. With his grandfather, who was himself a showman, he collects the first true moments of happiness at his father's carousel and candy stand: jealous but full of joy at growing up, he sucks in the fairground air and the smells of almonds and smoke machines carry his heart into a dream world that takes him won't let go in the years that follow. His parents, who want to give him a more stable job than that of showman, and his talent with the ball direct his way to a football boarding school, where he gets to know the other side of childhood far away from home.
An anniversary folk festival tournament takes Hansi back as a young adult to the homeland he longs for. After his brilliant winning goal in the final, the forgotten boy is celebrated by the crowd of visitors. Hansi has done his thing and is simply "The Thing"! He becomes a living legend and a fateful evening in the atmospheric marquee is looming.
Roland Jankowsky: When Overbeck comes...Friday, May 20, 2022, 8 p.m., Michael Arneth School Gundelsheim
In the popular ZDF crime series Wilsberg, he has been playing the somewhat odd Inspector Overbeck for over 23 years. In this role, he likes to put his foot in it, and often acts unbridled and on the verge of legality, which has earned him the nickname "Dirty Harry von Münster". Roland Jankowsky has many talents. Whether as an actor on TV, or in the theatre, as a singer or audio book narrator - his comedic potential is his unmistakable trademark.
Roland Jankowsky was voted "Germany's coolest TV commissioner 2018" by the viewers. Jankowsky has been touring Germany with his crime novels for a good ten years. In 2016 he received the audience award "Goldenen Berta" at the Eifelkulturtage.
Jankowsky, alias Inspector Overbeck, changes sides for the reading. The short stories read are about killers and the pitfalls that this profession has to face. Not every bullet that hits hits the right one. The Cologne actor is an excellent reader and his reading skills promise the very best entertainment.
Sönke Wortmann: The spoken word counts Sunday, May 22, 2022, 7 p.m., Kulturboden Hallstadt
Is silence really silver and speech golden? The year is 2019 Franz Josef Klenke works as a speechwriter for the German Foreign Minister Hans Behring and regularly accompanies him on his trips abroad. He is a convinced social democrat and does everything to make the man of integrity look good, which also means that while speeches are not necessarily untruthful, some truths are also not spoken out. But Klenke of all people, a man of words, loves Maria, who cannot speak. And that always causes problems. When the delegation embarked on a trip to Morocco to negotiate a readmission agreement for illegal refugees, the diplomat Cornelius von Schröder was waiting for them there. Recently, however, he has increasingly sympathized with the growing right, because he does not recognize his CDU. His goal is to prevent migration from African countries to Germany. Von Schröder is becoming more and more radical and has an agenda that nobody knows anything about.
ETA Hoffmann walk: With Martin NeubauerSunday, May 22, 2022, 10:45 a.m., ETA Hoffmann-Haus Bamberg
Ernst Theodor Amadeus Hoffmann, one of the best-known Romantic authors, lawyer, draftsman and composer, came to Bamberg in 1808 as Kapellmeister. His traces are still omnipresent today and tell exciting stories of great expectations, successes, failures and a great love. Martin Neubauer takes you to Bamberg and the world of ETA Hoffmann with scenically animated poems.
Maybe you will not only encounter the talking dog Berganza, but also "strange kinds of madness", a magical sow's tail, raspy Franks, bursting columns or a scolding doorknob?
Martin Neubauer, born in Bamberg, received his training at the "New Munich Acting School", graduating with a stage maturity examination. After radio and television experience, Neubauer shifted his focus to recitation, with the spoken word at the center. A particular focus of Neubauer's work is the connection between words and music. This led to appearances with the Cologne Radio Orchestra, the Thuringian Symphony Orchestra and the Bamberg Symphony Orchestra, the Bavarian State Philharmonic and the Berganza Quartet.
Neubauer received the City of Bamberg's Culture Promotion Prize and the Berganza Prize from the Bamberger Kunstverein. As a reciter, he constantly develops new programs with a pronounced preference for romantic poetry.
Rüdiger Safranski: ETA Hoffmann – The Life of a Skeptical DreamerMonday, May 23, 2022, 8 p.m., Harmoniesäle Bamberg
ETA Hoffmann actually wanted to be a musician, and as a composer and conductor he had some success. To be on the safe side, he studied law, but then, on a whim, he began to write stories and novels that have survived to this day: "Life Views of the Cat Murr", "The Devil's Elixir", "The Serapion Brothers". Rüdiger Safranski dedicated his first biography to him in 1984, and it is now being published on the 200th anniversary of his death, with an added epilogue. You will find everything worth knowing about life and work in it, but above all it awakens the desire to immerse yourself in the wild stories of ETA Hoffmann.
Helmut Vorndran: NatternsteineWednesday, May 25, 2022, 8 p.m., Örtelscheune Heiligenstadt
Franconia crime thriller. Funny, whimsical and hilarious.
In the Franconian Jura, a mountain tour ends fatally: instead of reaching for the rock, a climber grabs a dead person who pulls him down with him. The identity of the man cannot be determined - he is missing his head. When more headless dead people are discovered in old Lower Franconian police files and an unscrupulous stranger appears on the scene, all hopes are pinned on Inspector Lagerfeld and his new, talented detective piglet.
Christof Leim: 101 Rock StoriesWednesday, May 25, 2022, 8 p.m., Zehntscheune Schlüsselfeld
Music journalist Christof Leim tells the best noise and laughter stories from 100 years of rock'n'roll. It's about big stars and big songs, about accidents and deaths, about drugs, sex and superlatives. Why did Axl Rose want to hit David Bowie? What connects AC/DC with a serial killer? And what do Faith No More have to do with the fall of the Berlin Wall? Music history is full of oddities like this: Mötley Crüe wrestles with a sad double, Lemmy has the smartest way home, and Ozzy Osbourne usually goes nuts anyway. Or the night when The Who drummer Keith Moon accidentally ran over his chauffeur... Christof Leim also talks about his own experiences as a journalist, such as a momentous breakfast beer with Zakk Wylde and a train hunt with Rudolf Schenker. The listeners experience the bizarre and the enigmatic, the crazy and the surprising, expertly explained and performed with music. Since 2018, the Rock Stories have made guest appearances in countless theatres, clubs and pubs throughout Germany, as well as at the Full Metal Cruise, the Rock Hard Festival and the Hamburg Metal Dayz. You can imagine a rock stories show like a bar conversation among music freaks, where someone sits in front and, accompanied by little pictures, songs and videos, tells stories that we would talk about over a beer anyway.
Best of Poetry Slam: Bamberg is SlambergFriday, May 27, 2022, 8 p.m., StartUp Factory Bamberg
Four readings in one and at the end there is a winner... A poetry slam really doesn't have much in common with conventional readings. No reading table with a glass of water, just a microphone on a tripod, that's all it takes. The texts are read from sight, recited freely and performed with full physical effort. No tools, no disguises, only the spoken word counts. No expert jury, but the audience votes on what they like best. Four of the best poets from the German-speaking world are invited to show what they can do on the microphone. It will be moderated by slam zampano Christian Ritter. Bamberg is Slamberg again. More information about the line-up can be found on the Poetry Slam Bamberg social media channels.
Juliane Stadtler: Crown of HeavenFriday, May 27, 2022, 8 p.m., Club Kaulberg Bamberg
After devastating battles, most of the kingdom of Jerusalem falls back to the Saracens at the end of the 12th century. Barbarossa and the Lionheart then lead their armies to Acre, the gateway to the Holy Land. In the hope of being absolved of a serious sin, young Aveline embarks on the third crusade. Circumstances force her to pose as the archer Avery and join Barbarossa's army undetected. After being wounded in battle, she confides in the surgeon Étienne, who, like her, carries a heavy burden and struggles for justice and recognition. Together they find solace, but soon they realize that their worst enemy lurks not among the Saracens but within their own ranks...
Ewald Arenz: The Big SummerSaturday, May 28, 2022, 8 p.m., OSIANDER Bamberg
One man's throwback to the summer that changed his life forever.
It looks as if 16-year-old Friedrich will not make it to the next grade. His only chance is the exams, and that means no family vacation, no summer. As if that weren't bad enough, his mother condemned him to study with his grandfather. Frieder is horrified: with his grandfather of all people, whom he had to use in his initials until a few years ago! His only consolation is Nana, his grandmother. And Beate, the girl in the bottle-green bathing suit, whom he met at the swimming pool one of the last days before the holidays. Despite all terrible forebodings, in the following weeks he learns to see his grandfather with new eyes, learns about the love story of his grandparents and experiences his first great love himself. A perfect summer if it weren't for his best friend Johann, usually confident and cool, but actually a complicated person.
A novel that makes everyone remember: the first, maybe only great love, the bliss of friendship and the damn work that means growing up Ewald Arenz's new novel is funny, clairvoyant, touching, clever, sometimes very sad, but always delightful.
Bob Cremer: The Secret Language of the Blues - The True Meaning of the Song LyricsSunday, May 29, 2022, 7 p.m., Bauernmuseum Frensdorf
The combination of ambiguous lyrics and performed Delta Blues songs promises the audience a real blues crime thriller evening. There you will discover what seemingly harmless everyday words like “tea”, “frying pan” and even “Santa Claus” have completely different meanings.
In the 1960s, Bob Cremer gravitated towards the blues. Now the Bamberg native (who grew up in Chicago) has dedicated a 700-page book to the blues and its language. Sydney Ellis, a leading voice in today's blues scene, commented: "Robert Cremer, a modern day Alan Lomax, has amassed the spoken language of the blues through decades of personal interviews. The Blues Secret Language translates the intricacies, innuendos and flavors of the African American language used in blues music, making a deep understanding of blues lyrics accessible to all blues fans.”
The listeners can expect a varied evening with lots of new information about the blues and lots of authentic live music.
Alois Prinz: The Life of Simone de BeauvoirMonday, May 30, 2022, 8 p.m., Diocese House Bamberg
Simone de Beauvoir fought against myths, prejudices and habits all her life. That one is not born a woman, but is made to be one, is the sentence that made her famous. But Beauvoir has become a myth herself: an icon of feminism, a role model for the modern, emancipated woman, the queen of existentialism, a self-confident partner alongside Jean-Paul Sartre. She didn't want to glorify anything in her life. Following her conviction that nothing should be kept secret and that everything must be disclosed, she did not shy away from showing disappointments and the dark sides of her personality. Simone de Beauvoir wanted everything from life: luxury and renunciation, continuity and change. She believed that we humans need to hold on to hopes and promises that are ultimately unfulfillable. Alois Prinz tells the story of her life between the desire for happiness and loyalty to a reality that allows no escape.
Marc Raabe: Viola's hiding placeTuesday, May 31, 2022, 8 p.m., Buchenwelt ERTL Hallstadt
LKA investigator Tom Babylon is looking for his little sister "Vi", who disappeared without a trace in 1998. Now there's finally a clue: a recent photo of Viola hidden in his father's basement. A little later, his father dies in a mysterious attack on the Berlin subway. Babylon is sure that the culprit is also looking for Viola. And he thinks he knows who is behind it: his former mentor Dr. Walter Bruckmann, who swore to make his life hell. But how can a man who has been incarcerated in a psychiatric institution in the Alps since his conviction commit a murder in Berlin?
Wolfgang Schorlau: Kreuzberg BluesWednesday, June 1, 2022, 8 p.m., OSIANDER Bamberg
From Stuttgart to Berlin-Kreuzberg: Dengler's tenth case leads to the heart of the current struggle for the right to housing. Up-to-date and exciting. Georg Dengler feels more comfortable in Stuttgart than he has in a long time, and things are going better than ever with Olga. Despite the emerging corona pandemic, he lets her persuade him to investigate in Berlin. There, a real estate shark seems to piss off its tenants with criminal methods. But Dengler has to realize that the matter is bigger, much bigger. You won't find this anywhere else in the world: prefabricated buildings, chic townhouses, the Turkish community and the black block come together in a radius of a few hundred meters in Kreuzberg. Here, of all places, the building contractor wants to »rent« two houses. Any means is right for him. The tenants are fighting back. One of them asks her friend Olga for help. Suddenly she and Georg Dengler find themselves in the midst of modern Berlin house warfare for the right to housing. Then a man is thrown off the roof of one of the houses in dispute – and the situation escalates.
Johannes Krause & Thomas Trappe: HybrisThursday, June 2, 2022, 8 p.m., KUFA Bamberg
Humans have subjugated the planet to their needs at a breathtaking pace. In the 21st century, they are faced with the shards of what they have done: natural resources are exhausted, global warming is a deadly threat, global pandemics are an acute danger. Will we also overcome this crisis? From an evolutionary point of view, the emergence of modern humans is like the blink of an eye. In this short epoch we conquered continents, traveled through the arctic and desert, subjugated flora and fauna, overcame borders. Was this unstoppable expansion just a ride towards the abyss? Johannes Krause and Thomas Trappe tell of the incredible journey of mankind, of deadly setbacks and triumphs of a few populations. They show what we can learn from the past for our survival - and what dangers lie in the unbridled power of humans.
Jo Lendle: A kind of family Friday, June 3, 2022, 8 p.m., Bishop's House Bamberg
»It is the story of a German family. Coincidentally my own.« – Jo Lendle
Jo Lendle's cleverly narrated novel leads from the German Empire through National Socialism and the young GDR to the post-war Federal Republic of Germany about the breakup of a family, about guilt, about science and its relationship to the world and the subtle differences between sleep, anesthesia and death.
You don't choose the times that you find yourself in and that shape you. Just like Lud and Alma. Born in 1899, Lud and his brother Wilhelm adore Bach and Hölderlin and share the same unattainable ideals. Wilhelm, who joined the National Socialist Party at an early age, measured others by that, invited himself, which made him quarrel with himself throughout his life. Alma lost her parents when she was a child. Ihr Patenonkel Lud, wenig älter als sie selbst, und seine Haushälterin werden ihr eine Art Familie werden. Als Professor für Pharmakologie erforscht Lud den Schlaf und die Frage, wie man ihn erzeugen kann. Während er die Tage an der Universität verbringt, kann Alma zu Hause nicht aufhören, an ihn zu denken. Als er beginnt, Giftgas zu erforschen, erzählt er ihr nichts davon. Sein Ringen mit den hehren Idealen wird verzweifelter. Denn da ist auch noch Gerhard, an dessen Seite er im Ersten Weltkrieg kämpfte, den er nicht aus seinem Kopf bekommt.
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