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Aloisia Kirschner

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Name
  
Aloisia Kirschner


Role
  
Novelist

Aloisia Kirschner httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
February 10, 1934, Bohemia, Prague, Czech Republic

Books
  
Erlach Court, Our Own Set: A Novel, "Gloria Victis!": A Romance, Blanche: The Maid of Lille, The Story of a Genius and Other

Aloisia Kirschner (June 17, 1854 – February 10, 1934) was an Austrian novelist, born in Prague and favorably known under her pseudonym Ossip Schubin, which she borrowed from the novel Helena by Ivan Turgenev.

Aloisia Kirschner Boris Lensky Perfect Library Aloisia Kirschner The Perfect

Brought up on her parents' estate at Lochkov, she afterward spent several winters in Brussels, Paris, and Rome, receiving there, undoubtedly, many inspirations for her clever descriptions of artistic Bohemianism and international fashionable society, which were her favorite themes. An uncommonly keen observer, her great gift for striking characterization, frequently seasoned with sarcasm, is especially apparent in her delineations of the military and artistic circles in Austria-Hungary.

Aloisia Kirschner wwwbildarchivaustriaatBildarchiv187B3865675T

She died in 1934 at Schloss Kosatek, Bohemia.

Works

Her works are of unequal quality, the earlier being the best. The more important of her novels and stories include:

  • Ehre (1882; seventh edition, 1893)
  • Die Geschichte eines Genies: Die Galbrizzi (1884)
  • Unter uns (1884; fourth edition, 1892)
  • Gloria Victis (1885; third edition, 1892)
  • Erlachof (1887)
  • Es fiel ein Reif in der Frühlingsnacht (fourth edition, 1901)
  • Asbeïn, aus dem Leben eines Virtuosen (1888; fourth edition, 1901), and its sequel, Boris Lensky (1889; third edition, 1897), probably her most meritorious work
  • Unheimliche Geschichten (1889)
  • O du mein Oesterreich! (1890; third edition, 1897)
  • Finis Poloniœ (1893)
  • Toter Frühling (1893)
  • Gebrochene Flügel (1894)
  • Die Heimkehr (1897)
  • Slawische Liebe (1900)
  • Marska (1902)
  • Refugium peccatorum (1903)
  • Der Gnadenschuss (1905)
  • Der arme Nicki (1906)
  • Primavera (1908)
  • Miserere nobis (1910)
  • References

    Aloisia Kirschner Wikipedia


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