Joseph Kalmer

Joseph Kalmer (August 17, 1898, Nehrybka, today Poland - July 9, 1959, Vienna) was an Austrian writer, poet and translator.

Kalmer attended high school in Czernowitz and gymnasium in Vienna. He started to write during his studies, and later became a journalist. In 1938, after the Anschluss, he emigrated to Czechoslovakia and a year later to England where he set up a literary agency.

In 1935, together with Ludwig Huyn, Kalmer wrote a book Abessinien (Abyssinia or Ethiopia) about travel to that country. The book is a vivid and detailed description of the history, people and customs of this ancient country getting dragged into the modern age under threat of war with Italy. The book was translated into several languages (e.g. into Czech, 1935).

Kalmer is mentioned during a sketch of the Argentine humorous program Cha Cha Cha. When the mormon character says:[1]

... when Bochini comes down on Mount Caliburn, he talks to two people, one is called Joseph Kalmer....

gollark: I really should have bought more than 8GB of RAM for this computer. Having it temporarily freeze when I have several hundred tabs open and an IDE and some compression/data fetching scripts running in the background is *not* convenient.
gollark: Happy chicken, Zenthros!
gollark: Bob must be DESTROYED.
gollark: no.
gollark: Or just write some papers on "the taste of various chemicals" and see if anyone accepts them.

References

  1. ChaChaCha - Mormón Chileno 1, retrieved 2019-08-21
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.