Lisa Tetzner (1894–1963)
Forfatter af De sorte brødre
Om forfatteren
Image credit: www.kjoek.nl
Serier
Værker af Lisa Tetzner
Sam och Agaleia 2 eksemplarer
Märchen, gesammelt und nacherzählt von Lisa Tetzner 2 eksemplarer
The Children from Number 67 2 eksemplarer
Vom Märchenbaum der Welt 2 eksemplarer
All världens vackra sagor. Röda samlingen 1 eksemplar
Erwin gaat naar Zweden 1 eksemplar
Het zwervende schip 1 eksemplar
Vi i 67:an 1 eksemplar
Piccoletto 1 eksemplar
Terdampar ke sebuah pulau 1 eksemplar
Wat Er Aan Het Meer Gebeurde... 1 eksemplar
All världens vackra sagor. Gula samlingen 1 eksemplar
De sorte brødre - Giorgio i knibe 1 eksemplar
De sorte brødre - De solgte drenge 1 eksemplar
All världens vackra sagor. Blå samlingen 1 eksemplar
Kom med ut i världen! 1 eksemplar
Lisa Tetzner's Sprookjesboek 1 eksemplar
Het huis op de heuvel 1 eksemplar
Als ich wiederkam : aus Erwins Tagebuch 1 eksemplar
De kleine Soe uit Afrika 1 eksemplar
Die Kinder aus Nr. 67 [...] [...] 1 eksemplar
Hans Sees the World 1 eksemplar
All världens vackra sagor 1 eksemplar
Associated Works
Satte nøgleord på
Almen Viden
- Kanonisk navn
- Tetzner, Lisa
- Juridisk navn
- Tetzner, Lisa
- Fødselsdato
- 1894-11-10
- Dødsdag
- 1963-07-02
- Køn
- female
- Nationalitet
- Deutschland (Geburt)
Deutschland (Ausbürgerung, 1938)
Schweiz (Einbürgerung, 1948) - Land (til kort)
- Germany
Switzerland - Fødested
- Zittau, Germany
- Dødssted
- Carona, Switzerland
- Bopæl
- Carona, Switzerland
- Erhverv
- children's book author
radio producer
teacher
fairy tale writer - Relationer
- Held, Kurt (pen name husband)
- Kort biografi
- Lisa Tetzner was born to a middle-class German family in in Zittau (Lausitz), the daughter of a doctor. She had a special interest in collecting and writing fairy tales. In 1924, she married Kurt Kläber, a writer who used the pseudonym Kurt Held. She began writing books for children after World War I. She also worked as a teacher and produced a radio program called "Children's Hour" for the Berlin Broadcast Service during the late 1920s. With her husband, she co-authored the nine-volume series Children from No. 67 (1933-1949). In 1933, to escape persecution from the Nazi regime in Germany, Tetzner and Held, who was Jewish and a Communist, fled to exile in Switzerland; they lived there the rest of their lives. Among their other joint works was the classic Black Brothers: A Novel in Pictures (1941), translated into English in 2004.
Medlemmer
Anmeldelser
Hæderspriser
Måske også interessante?
Associated Authors
Statistikker
- Værker
- 63
- Also by
- 1
- Medlemmer
- 387
- Popularitet
- #62,499
- Vurdering
- 4.1
- Anmeldelser
- 5
- ISBN
- 96
- Sprog
- 9
- Udvalgt
- 2