Evelyn Clevé
Evelyn Clevé , also Eveline Clevé-Klebert (born October 23, 1906 in Schöneberg near Berlin as Eveline Miranda Halm ; † after 1961) was a German writer .
Life
Eveline Halm was born as the daughter of Alfred Halm , director of the Neues Schauspielhaus in Schöneberg. After attending an arts and crafts school , she lived as a writer in Berlin. In 1936, the National Socialist rulers imposed a writing ban on them. Clevé was the author of books for children and young people . Her biography Helen Keller , first published in 1947 and reprinted several times until 1995, was particularly successful .
Works
- The forest railway. Reichenau, Sa. [u. a.] 1935 (together with Marigard Bantzer )
- Helen Keller. Berlin 1947
- Heinrich Schliemann. Berlin 1948
- Jerry, the farmer's daughter. Düsseldorf 1956
- Queen for England. Stuttgart 1958
- You have to move to France, Johanna. Stuttgart 1961
Individual evidence
- ↑ Birth register StA Schöneberg I, No. 2774/1906
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Clevé, Evelyn |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Clevé-Klebert, Eveline |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German writer |
DATE OF BIRTH | October 23, 1906 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Berlin-Schöneberg |
DATE OF DEATH | after 1961 |