#volker kutscher
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chucklepea-hotpot · 1 year ago
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idek how else to explain the differences between babylon berlin tv and the gereon rath books with anything else but „messed up gay sibling whose straight twin sibling is allegedly the more responsible one but is actually way more fucked up“
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sacredwhores · 2 years ago
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Babylon Berlin (2017-)
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elena-ferrante · 2 years ago
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babylon berlin by volker kutscher
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weissengel · 2 years ago
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gentlemanbooks · 2 years ago
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Fans of detective Rath out there? I really liked the novels (except the last one, 'Transatlantik'), they are both well written crime stories and a portrait of Germany before and during the rise of fascism.
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hoerbahnblog · 2 years ago
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Literaturkritik.de: „Transatlantik. Der neunte Rath-Roman“ von Volker Kutscher – eine Rezension von Dietmar Jacobsen
Literaturkritik.de: „Transatlantik. Der neunte Rath-Roman“ von Volker Kutscher – eine Rezension von Dietmar Jacobsen Hördauer ca. 11 Minuten) https://literaturradiohoerbahn.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Literaturkritik-de-Transatlantik-Kutscher-upload-.mp3 Mit Transatlantik legt Volker Kutscher bereits seinen neunten Gereon-Rath-Roman vor. Er knüpft unmittelbar an die Ereignisse an, die der…
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bryonyashley · 2 years ago
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'And this,' Rath continued, 'is Charlotte Ritter, prospective lawyer.' He broke off when he saw Charly's frozen smile.
"Goldstein" by Volker Kutscher
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rogue-coyote · 3 months ago
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chucklepea-hotpot · 1 year ago
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Witzigste Stelle im ganzen Buch. Hat ja nur fast 470 Seiten gedauert.
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ulkunun · 11 months ago
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"Bu kentte yeni yapılan binaların kaçının insan kemikleri üzerine inşa edildiğini bilmek istemem doğrusu."
ıslak balık, volker kutscher, çev. cem sey, iletişim y.
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elena-ferrante · 2 years ago
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reading the first gereon rath book and i can’t stress enough the amount of simping this man is doing
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simping so hard i simply have to make part 2
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weissengel · 2 years ago
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kunstplaza · 18 days ago
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fraugoethe · 22 days ago
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Gereon Raths letzter Besuch
Rath von Volker Kutscher Berlin, 1938. Gereon Rath ist wieder in Deutschland, einem Land, in dem er gesucht wird. Sein Vater hatte einen Schlaganfall und Gereon, ebenso wie sein Bruder Severin unterstützen die Familie. Eingereist ist er als Gerald Rhodes. Sein zweites Ziel ist es, seine Frau Charly nach Amerika zu holen. Doch sie hat noch einige Verpflichtungen zu erledigen. Seit ihrer…
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metapolitica-y-ufologia-5h1 · 2 months ago
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kaxdko4N_Yk ¡Te invitamos a un nuevo capítulo de la serie de transmisiones en vivo del ciclo 2024: "ANÁLISIS HIPERBÓREO DE PELÍCULAS"! Con los comentarios y análisis expertos del Lic. Pablo Santa Cruz de la Vega. Hoy, nos sumergiremos en el fascinante mundo de la serie Babylon Berlin, una serie de televisión alemana de carácter histórico y policíaco, cuya primera temporada se estrenó el 13 de octubre de 2017 en la cadena Sky 1 de Alemania. La serie reproduce investigaciones policíacas en la ciudad de Berlín entre 1929 y 1934 en la República de Weimar.
La serie se basa en las novelas del escritor y periodista Volker Kutscher, cuyo primer título, "Der nasse Fisch", se publicó en español en 2010 como Sombras sobre Berlín. El principal protagonista es el inspector de policía Gereon Rath.
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corainne · 5 months ago
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MID YEAR FREAKOUT BOOK TAG THINGY
Or whatever it is called I just saw a tik tok and felt like doing it even if exactly zero (0) persons are gonna care idc I'm sick so leave me alone
Number of books read this year so far: 55
1. Best book you've read so far in 2024
The Great Believers by Rebecca Makkai, first book to properly make me cry since A Monster Calls a decade ago. Beautiful, heartbreaking, 10/10
2. Best sequel you've read so far this year
On pure enjoyment I'd say City of Vengence by D. V. Bishop (I'll count it as a sequel even though it's book 1 because I read book 3 first), on a craft basis Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel and Winter of the World by Ken Follett.
Obligatory shoutout to the seven Gereon Rath books I've read this year, I could never choose a favourite because I read them all in a span of like two weeks and they've all clumped together in a blob of Nazis and misery. (If pressed I'd say Märzgefallene, followed by Die Akte Vaterland)
3. New release you haven't read yet, but want to
The Women by Kristin Hannah
Dust Child by Nguyên Phan Quê Mai
A Divine Fury by D. V. Bishop
Mirrored Heavens by Rebecca Roanhorse
4. Most anticipated release for the second half of the year
Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson
Rath by Volker Kutscher
5. Biggest disappointment
When We Were Orphans by Kazuo Ishiguru. Really didn’t like that one, especially the back third.
6. Biggest surprise
Augustus: From Revolutionary to Emperor by Adrian Goldsworthy. Not really the airport read I was expecting to pick up (granted, the only fiction book I had with me was The Name of the Rose and that’s not what I would consider light reading) but I enjoyed it a lot more than expected (tbh honest I thought it was going to spend the next decade or so on my shelf unread like most of my history books) and it really furthered my current love for history non-fiction.
7. Favourite new author (debut or new to you)
Colson Whitehead. I read The Underground Railroad and The Nickel Boys for the first time this year, and they were both masterful.
8. Newest fictional crush
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9. Newest favourite character
Empress Messalina, who is not a character but a historical figure. You go girl, sorry you had to die and had your name dragged through the mud by misogynistic men for millenia
10. Book that made you cry feel physically sick
Bloodlands: Europe between Hitler and Stalin by Timothy Snyder
11. A book that made you happy
Gwen & Art are Not in Love by Lex Croucher
12. Most beautiful book you've bought so far this year
The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese
13. What books do you need to read by the end of the year?
The 103 unread books on my tbr shelf
At the beginning of the year I set myself the goal of reading 12 classics (0/12), non-fiction (12/12), award-winning (8/12) and translated novels (3/12), so I'd like to finish that goal.
More specifically my priority tbr at the moment is:
Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell
Dust Child by Nguyên Phan Quê Mai
As Long as the Lemon Trees Grow by Zoulfa Katouh
The Light Years by Elizabeth Jane Howard
The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese
In Memoriam by Alice Winn
Currently reading:
Dark Fire by C.J. Sansom
Philip and Alexander: Kings and Conquerors by Adrian Goldsworthy
Just for the Summer by Abby Jimenez
Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari
Not going to tag anyone, but if you want to do this feel free to consider yourself tagged, I love to see what other people are reading
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