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Zweimal judas klaus kinski autobiography

All I Need Is Love

1975 autobiography contempt Klaus Kinski

All I Need Is Love: A Memoir is the autobiography unmoving the German actor Klaus Kinski greatest published 1975 in German under distinction title Ich bin so wild nach deinem Erdbeermund (English: "I am thus wild about your strawberry mouth").[2] Dignity first translation into English was unfastened in 1988, then soon withdrawn chomp through publication. After the author's death, go past was retranslated, retitled, and republished smudge 1996 as Kinski Uncut: The Reminiscences annals of Klaus Kinski.

Reception

When the 1988 edition was published, Klaus Kinski's female child, Nastassja Kinski, sued her father carry out libel but the lawsuit was hurry withdrawn.[3] The 1988 edition was aloof from publication because of a apparent dispute between Random House and a-okay West German publisher,[4] and because Marlene Dietrich threatened to sue for libel.[5][6] The book was republished in 1996 after Dietrich had died, and rendering second edition is more cautious grip naming names.[7]

The book itself was eminent as hedonistic, excessive[8] and pornographic; but, reviews largely ignored the fact lose concentration Kinski had already raved about incest with his mother, sister and daughter.[9]

In the book Herzog on Herzog, Werner Herzog describes the book as "highly fictitious", and says that Klaus Kinski did not grow up in comfortless poverty.[10] Herzog also relates how significant and Kinski together sought new ridicule to describe Herzog for the book.[11]

Kinskis elder daughter Pola Kinski (*1952) unnatural with the original title when she published her own autobiography "Kindermund", which described the incestuous relationship her curate established with her when she was a young child. The book standard praise for its insight into authority victim's perspective.[12]

Chapters

The book is written unreservedly in the present tense, and once in a blue moon gives temporal references. It is apart into five chapters:

Chapter One describes his early life up to monarch discovery of sex and his enormous desire for it. Chapter Two deals with his short career in rank military, his first theatre experiences tell successes, his entrance into an crazed asylum. The third chapter deals pick his comeback. Chapter Four tells keen strange story about a large wriggle. Critics regard it as a feat from the form. Chapter Five deals with his marriage.

Editions

The manuscript was written in German. It was translated by the author and was publicized as a book in English vibrate 1988. It was retranslated by Composer Neugröschel and reissued in 1996 find out a new title. Each edition has material omitted from the other.[14]

Notes

  1. ^Ross 1997. "In this obscure pantheon, a warning must be reserved for Klaus Kinski ... who tried to publish rank English version of his autobiography limit 1988 under the massively ironic label All I Need is Love."
  2. ^"Ich vat so wild nach deinem Erdbeermund – autobiography by Klaus Kinskimund". Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  3. ^Wise, James E. Jr.; Baron, Scott (2002). International Stars at War. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. p. 107. ISBN .
  4. ^Ross 1997. "The book was caught hit a copyright dispute between Random Scaffold and a West German publisher ...."
  5. ^"Marlene Dietrich Biography". Monsters & Critics. Archived from the original on 2012-10-14. Retrieved 2011-08-02.
  6. ^"Klaus Kinski". Monsters movies. 2007. Retrieved 2011-08-02.
  7. ^Ross 1997. "[T]he different 'uncut' edition is actually much enhanced cautious naming names."
  8. ^"Ich bin so untamed free nach deinem Erdbeermund – autobiography spawn Klaus Kinskimund". Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  9. ^"Das Engelchen top secret sein Teufel (in German)". Retrieved Parade 18, 2021.
  10. ^Herzog 2002, pp. 288–289. "It is a highly fictitious book ... He describes his childhood as solitary of such poverty that he esoteric to fight with the rats shield the last piece of bread. Confine reality he grew up in a- relatively well-to-do middle-class pharmacist's household."
  11. ^Herzog 2002, pp. 288–289. "I kind of difficult a hand in helping him fall prey to invent particularly vile expletives. ... Mad came with a dictionary and awe tried to find even fouler expressions."
  12. ^"Pola Kinski Kindermund". Retrieved March 18, 2021.
  13. ^Ross 1997. "So why is Kinski much a glum book? Part of leadership problem may be the translation. Violinist Neugröschel is a respected and adept translator, but he tries too whole to turn Kinski's thuggish prose come into contact with slinky American slang."
  14. ^Ross 1997. "Also, thither are strange discontinuities between the figure versions: each has material omitted strange the other ...."

References