Elisabeth Bürstenbinder
Elisabeth Bürstenbinder (pen name, Ernst Werner; born in Berlin on 25 November 1838; died in Merano on 10 October 1918) was a German writer who wrote under the name Ernst Werner. She first gained attention in 1870 with Hermann.[1] Among her works Sacred Vows, Fickle Fortune, Riven Bonds, and some others had English translations.[2]
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Elisabeth Bürstenbinder
Bibliography
Novels
- Am Altar, Leipzig 1873
- Glück auf!, Leipzig 1874
- Gesprengte Fesseln, Leipzig 1875
- Vineta, Leipzig 1877
- Um hohen Preis, Leipzig 1878
- Frühlingsboten, Leipzig 1880
- Der Egoist, Leipzig 1882
- Gebannt und erlöst, Leipzig 1884
- Ein Gottesurteil, Leipzig 1885
- Heimatklang, Leipzig 1887
- Sankt Michael, Leipzig 1887
- Die Alpenfee, Leipzig 1889
- Flammenzeichen, Leipzig 1890
- Freie Bahn!, Leipzig 1893
- Fata Morgana, Leipzig 1896
- Hexengold, Leipzig 1900
- Runen, 1903
- Siegwart, 1909
Novellas
- Gartenlaubenblüten, Leipzig 1872
- Die Blume des Glücks, Leipzig 1885
- Adlerflug, Berlin 1886
gollark: There's interesting content about basically every topic you might like, people to talk to who are sometimes not terrible, and you can actually be taken seriously if you know some things.
gollark: Most of it, anyway.
gollark: The internet is great for children ish.
gollark: Although I'm not sure if it's an FCC thing.
gollark: These "child protection" laws always seem to have been horrible and poorly implemented.
References
- William Harrison De Puy (1896). The University of Literature...: A Cyclopædia of Universal Literature, Presenting in Alphabetical Arrangement the Biography, Together with Critical Reviews and Extracts, of Eminent Writers of All Lands and All Ages. J.S. Barcus. pp. 501–506.
- Chamber's Encyclopædia: A Dictionary of Universal Knowledge. W. R. Chambers. 1897. p. 609.
External links
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