Reinhold Eichacker

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Reinhold Eichacker (born May 21, 1886 in Siegburg ; † July 10, 1931 in Gröbenzell near Munich ; pseudonyms : Uncle Reinhold , Arno Orli , Arnold Orli , Salve , Reinhold Salve , Salve-Sherry , Sherry , Roman Sherry ) was a German lawyer and writers .

Life

Reinhold Eichacker was the son of a higher regional judge . He grew up in Cologne , where he attended a grammar school and in 1905 passed the school leaving examination. He then served as a flag junior in an artillery regiment in Brandenburg ; after he was promoted to officer in 1906 , he ended his military career as a reserve officer in 1908 . Eichacker studied law at the universities in Bonn and Munich . In 1911 he passed the state examination and then worked in Bensberg and Cologne; In the same year his doctorate he attended the University of Heidelberg with a work on a theme from the field of company law for a doctor of law .

From 1913, Eichacker, who had already published literary works since 1908, lived as a freelance writer in Tutzing in Upper Bavaria . He was the owner of the Munich publishing house Prometheus; In the twenties he was also active as a literary consultant for film productions and worked as an actor in several feature films for Munich's Orbis-Film .

Reinhold Eichacker's literary work consists of novels , stories , children's books , essays , poems , plays and libretti for operas and operettas . His narrative work includes adventure , crime and science fiction novels as well as works with erotic themes.

At the time of National Socialism , an entry in the list of harmful and undesirable literature from 1938 stated that all of his writings were banned in Germany.

After the Second World War, his book Haß, which he published in 1921 at Universal Verlag in Munich , was published in the Soviet occupation zone . Answer by German poets to Versailles added to the list of literature to be discarded. In the German Democratic Republic , this list was followed by the publications Der Namenlose und Horst Willmann , which he wrote and published in the same year and with the same publisher .

Works

  • All sorts of sounds , Bonn 1908
  • The compensation claims of the general partner during the existing company , Heidelberg 1911
  • Odysseus , Dresden 1911
  • Forgive us our debts! Dresden 1911
  • After sunset , Munich [u. a.] 1912
  • The opponent of the duel , Dresden 1914
  • Letters to Life , Stuttgart [a. a.] 1916
  • Nights of Venus , Universal-Verlag, Munich 1918
  • Open your eyes! We live! Oranienburg 1919
  • The three loves of Gaston Meder , Munich 1919
  • Goldfrätz-Herzschätze , Munich 1919 (under the name of Onkel Reinhold, together with Josef Mander)
  • The rose-colored bathroom u. a. , Munich 1919
  • Horst Willmann , Munich 1920
  • The Nameless One , Munich 1921
  • The fight for gold , Schwedt a. d. O. 1922
  • Panik , Schwedt a. d. O. 1922
  • Reinhold Eichacker Breviary , Stuttgart 1922
  • The soul song , Dresden-Weinböhla 1922
  • Crazy stories , Weinböhla b. Dresden 1923
  • The journey into nowhere , Munich 1924
  • The doctrine of happiness , Langensalza 1926
  • Krasputin the miracle worker , Leipzig 1927
  • People in need! Berlin 1929
  • Gaston and the singer , Leipzig 1929
  • Gaston, the impostor , Leipzig 1929
  • Gaston and the Whore , Leipzig 1929

Editing

  • Flaming Venus , Universal-Verlag, Munich 1919
  • Hate. Answer by German poets to Versailles . Universal-Verlag, Munich 1921.

Web links

Wikisource: Reinhold Eichacker  - Sources and full texts

Individual evidence

  1. Exiled Books. Online publication of the list of writings banned by the National Socialists , website of the city of Berlin
  2. ^ German administration for popular education in the Soviet occupation zone, list of literature to be sorted out. 1948 , Polunbi, database writing and image 1900–1960
  3. ^ German administration for popular education in the Soviet occupation zone, list of literature to be sorted out. 1953 , Polunbi, database writing and image 1900–1960