Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Brent Corrigan And Brent Everret



Since Volker Mauersberger ten year-old student at the local newspaper of his hometown Gevelsberg 1949 at competition "Students write," won a prize, he wanted to be a journalist.
Following an internship and studying social sciences, which he completed with a diploma and doctorate, he devoted himself to the then-new medium of radio: As political editor of the WDR, he reported from the former federal capital Bonn, with side trips to Berlin, Warsaw, Madrid and Lisbon. Mauersberger loves the good old radio. But his heart is in the book and especially to the newspaper. "Who writes, remains," says the journalist, reported the twelve years for TIME from Madrid and six years for THE WEEK from Bonn. With his book publications, he has often provoked opposition. The unmasking of the self-styled counter-sized company Rudolf Pechel introduced as an early follower of Adolf Hitler in the early seventies to a to-disputed media coverage, "in his bestseller How the left can be Jusos"
attacked the former admirer of Willy Brandt, together with prominent authors of the political shift to the right after? the Guillaume affair and the inauguration of Helmut Schmidt. Starting in 1977, followed twelve years as a television correspondent on the Iberian peninsula, which were interrupted by a three-year time chief editor of Radio Bremen. The Return to Madrid was Mauersberger, who loves writing about anything, an act of liberation. In his book "Spain - change to Europe," he reported on the local
transformation from dictatorship to democracy. The early nineties, returned Mauersberger
in the united Germany to devote next to the current work to a new book project. In 1939 in Weimar born wanted to know why his father, who admired Goethe and Schiller, as an SS sergeant in the concentration camp Buchenwald landed. The son was only a small consolation that his father left in 1940 at his own insistence Buchenwald and had reported to the front. The book "Hitler in Weimar - The Case of a German cultural center "is the settlement with a politically deluded bourgeoisie that Hitler was preparing the way voluntarily. Since his retirement, is located in Bonn
survivors in the active state anxiety. After a longer teaching at the University of Münster, he presented the 2007 biography of the politician Bremer Henning Scherf. "A wonderfully readable book written and distant," the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung praised Then was fulfilled Mauersberger a long-held wish: a thrilling novel in the manner of his literary idol to write Truman Capote. The material he found in the archive of his former home city, where old files stored on the case of Ellen Rinsche. "My contribution to the Enlightenment post-war Germany, "says the author. "When writing, I was clear again, why we protested so vehemently against the musty Adenauer era."

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