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Familiendaten der
Paul Wolfgang Merkelschen Familienstiftung Nürnberg
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1906 - 1975 (69 Jahre)
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Name |
Karl Stern |
Titel |
Prof.Dr.med. |
Geburt |
08 Apr 1906 |
Cham |
Geschlecht |
männlich |
Beruf |
Chefarzt Nervenklinik Ottawa |
Tod |
06 Nov 1975 |
Personen-Kennung |
I845 |
Paul Wolfgang Merkel | Keller-Daten |
Zuletzt bearbeitet am |
25 Aug 2016 |
Familie |
Lieselotte (Elisabeth) (Charlotte) von Baeyer, geb. 17 Jan 1907, München,,,,,,,, gest. 12 Sep 1971, Montreal (Alter 64 Jahre) |
Kinder |
| 1. Dr.med. "Antony" Moritz Stern, geb. 03 Jul 1937, London,,,,,,,, gest. 24 Mai 1967 (Alter 29 Jahre) |
| 2. "Katherine" Esther Stern, geb. 26 Aug 1940, Montreal,,,,,,,, gest. 16 Nov 2020, Montreal (Alter 80 Jahre) |
| 3. Lebend |
| 4. John Stern, geb. 27 Nov 1943, Montreal,,,,,,,, gest. 30 Nov 1943, Montreal,,,,,,,, (Alter 0 Jahre) |
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Zuletzt bearbeitet am |
26 Mrz 2008 |
Familien-Kennung |
F189 |
Familienblatt | Familientafel |
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Notizen |
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Stern
Autor von: Stern, Karl, The Pillar of Fire, a personal story of a spiritual voyage from Judaism to Catholicism, London Michael Joseph 1951
auf deutsch 1954
„Die Feuerwolke“ übersetzt von Elisabeth Mayer
The flight from woman 1965
Love and success 1975
Über ihn : A forgotten Freudian: The passion of Karl Stern von Daniel Burston.
2016
Außerdem
novel "Through Dooms of love" 1960 Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Cudahy
besprochen in
KIRKUS REVIEW 14.3.1960
The Radberts, a Czechoslovakian family of wealth and culture, find little but fancy and illusion to support them once they have been loosed from their familiar moorings. Particularly outcast are Radbert senior, a quixotic aesthete, who has tried to fill his life with the love of art when he is refused the love of his wife, and his daughter, Marianne, neurotically tied to her father. When Marianne, a model, suggests that she may be becoming involved with her employer, a successful business man who has made it the hard way, her father succumbs to a stroke which renders him partially insane. Out of this disaster is born the passion of Marianne Radbert, a passion which takes her through the fires of neurotic torment and salves her with a balm, one part Catholicism, one part psychoanalysis. Karl Stern, author of The Pillar of Fire and The Third Revolution does not digress from his theme of guilt and expiation, but injects incest, psychosis, and isolation into character and situation which are at once oppressive and familiar. A long, depressing novel which , after much whining, ends with a whimper.
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