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Examples

  • Cultural officials in Petrópolis this year organized a multimedia exhibit called "Stefan Zweig Lives!"

    NYT > Home Page By SIMON ROMERO 2011

  • Cultural officials in Petrópolis this year organized a multimedia exhibit called "Stefan Zweig Lives!"

    NYT > Global Home By SIMON ROMERO 2011

  • Cultural officials in Petrópolis this year organized a multimedia exhibit called "Stefan Zweig Lives!"

    NYT > Home Page By SIMON ROMERO 2011

  • Stefan Zweig, one of many fellow émigrés who make an appearance in Ms. Juers's chronicle, ended up in Brazil, where he committed suicide in 1942.

    The Other Mann Martin Rubin 2011

  • See Knut Beck, “Nachbermerkung des Herausgebers,” in Stefan Zweig, Castellio gegen Calvin Frankfurt: Fischer Taschenbuch, 1996, 243–44.

    Bloodlust Russell Jacoby 2011

  • Roy Hodgson recently read a book called Beware of Pity by Stefan Zweig, one of his favourite writers.

    Roy Hodgson has no self-pity after his re-emergence at West Brom 2011

  • In the works of a distinguished generation of Central European writers, such as the Austrians Stefan Zweig and Joseph Roth or the Hungarians Anton Szerb and Sándor Márai, the past serves as a foil for the present.

    A Hungarian Novelist's Literature of Fidelity Eric Ormsby 2011

  • See Knut Beck, “Nachbermerkung des Herausgebers,” in Stefan Zweig, Castellio gegen Calvin Frankfurt: Fischer Taschenbuch, 1996, 243–44.

    Bloodlust Russell Jacoby 2011

  • Roth's letters to the saintly Stefan Zweig, author of the novel "Beware of Pity" and the novella "Chess Game," are the most interesting.

    Dispatches From a Lost Empire Tess Lewis 2012

  • "The popularity of wr iters like Stefan Zweig and Joseph Roth, especially in a country like France, has a lot to do with an acute nostalgia for Mitteleuropa [middle Europe], a nostalgia for a highly cultured and diverse Europe, with its Jewish dimension, that existed between the wars."

    Rediscovering Europe's War-Time Writers 2010

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