History that reads like a novel: the story of the writers and intellectuals   behind the failed Bavarian Revolution of 1918, by the author of the acclaimed   Summer Before the Dark The   bloody war has lasted more than four years. They aren't just going to let it   burn out... Something bright and new has to-has to-come out of the   darkness. Munich, November 1918: in the final   days of the First World War, revolutionaries open the doors of military   prisons, occupy official buildings and overthrow the monarchy. At the head of   the newly declared Free State of Bavaria is journalist and theatre critic   Kurt Eisner, and around him rally luminaries of German cultural history:   Thomas Mann, Ernst Toller and Rainer Maria Rilke. Yet the   dream cannot last: in February 1919, Eisner is assassinated and the   revolution fails. But while it survived, it was the writers, the poets. the   playwrights and the intellectuals who led the way, imagining new ways of   shaping the world. In his characteristically vivid, sharp   prose, Volker Weidermann hones in on a short moment in history, revealing an   extraordinary flourishing of revolutionary potential that could have altered   the course of the twentieth century. The award-winning   writer and literary critic Volker Weidermann was   born in Germany in 1969, and studied political science and German language   and literature in Heidelberg and Berlin. He is the cultural editor of the   Der Spiegel, and the author of Summer Before   the Dark, which is also published by Pushkin Press.
Volker Weidermann (b. 1969) is literary editor at Der Spiegel and the award-winning author of several literary histories and critical biographies. In 2009, he won the Kurt Tucholsky Prize for Literary Journalism for Buch der verbrannten Bücher ('Book of Burned Books'). Summer Before the Dark, his first work to appear in English, was a bestseller in Germany and is being translated into several languages.
        
    
    
            Weidermann
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