The secret of the amazing success of Remarque's works is apparently in the fact that they reflect the values โโimportant to every person: loneliness and courage, perseverance and humanity. The themes of his works, on their pages got a biography of Remarque. Three tens of millions of his books were sold in the world.
Childhood and youth
The future writer was born in Prussia in 1898. As expected, he studied at school, then worked as a teacher. But the war began, and he was called to the front. He was quickly seriously injured by shrapnel in his thigh. Then he spent a long time in the hospital - until the end of October 1918. Remarque's biography will receive the first scary sheet, which will include an unforgettable trace of the war for life.
After the war
Since 1918, Remarque has been working, changing various professions, and in 1920 he released his first novel. By 1925, he had already grasped the basics of the work of a professional writer. Remarque moves to Berlin and marries a young beauty with tuberculosis. The girl's name is Jutta, but all friends call her Jeanne. Her image will later appear in several of his novels. She is best known as Pat from the Three Comrades. After living together for four years, they will divorce, with Jeanne taking the blame.
But they will re-register the marriage so that she can leave Nazi Germany. They will no longer live as one family, but financially Remarque will help Jeanne until the end of her life and leave her a significant inheritance. He will carry a noble attitude towards a woman who is already a stranger through his whole life. This is how Remarque's biography is connected with his first marriage.
Tremendous success
In 1929, a novel was released that would cause fierce debate in Germany. It is called "On the Western Front without Change." The images of war-warped boys, who, sitting in the trenches, learned only one thing, are killing and dying. They are not ready for a peaceful life. This will be shown in his next work, The Return (1931). The first book will make a film. From fees for the huge circulation of the book, translated into different languages, and the film Remarque will receive a decent condition. In April 1932, a world-famous writer moved to Switzerland. There, he, free from material problems, writes Three Comrades (1936) and collects paintings of post-impressionists with enthusiasm. Remarque's biography is marked by international success.
Fateful year
In September of the 37th year in Venice, two will meet, the son of a bookbinder and the daughter of a policeman. The city of masks gathered celebrities from all over the world to the film festival. At a cafe table, Remarque caught the woman's interested look.
He was familiar with her companion and approached this pair. The writer introduced himself to the lady: Erich Maria Remarque. After meeting him, his biography will be filled with a disastrous and divine feeling of a half-divided, crumbly love. By this time, the rich and famous Remarque was drinking. At the time of the meeting with Marlene Dietrich, he was 39 years old. Women preferred to remain friends with the writer, warrior, rake and dandy. There was discord in my soul. The world collapsed, not only inside, but also outside. The Nazis burned all his books, deprived of citizenship.
Game of feelings
A few hours later Marlene's dating field invited him to her room. They talked all night. Oddly enough, Marlene understood him perfectly. She also hated fascism with all her heart, as she hated everything ugly, she, too, was left without a homeland. Circumstances demanded the departure of Dietrich in the United States. Remarque lived only by letters.
He quit drinking and counted the days before the meeting. They met five months later. Remarque began a new love affair, his and Marlene. He did not yet know where his plot of the Arc de Triomphe would lead. And Marlene did not promise anything and thereby promised everything. Remarque locked himself in and worked on the novel. Only in this way could he avoid the intrusive attention of reporters, parties and, most importantly, the unscrupulous flirting of Marlene.
It is flirting. He forbade himself to think about more. For Remarque, Ravik thought in the Arc de Triomphe. Marlene was an ordinary woman, but Remarque preferred to see the queen in her with his quirks. He would have walked away from an ordinary woman easily, but he could not from a queen.
America
The world was also coming to an end. Everyone understood that the war was near. Marlene insisted that Remarque move with her to the United States. He hoped to share with Marlene not only holidays, but also everyday life. Remarque made a proposal to Marlene. She refused. Remarque had the courage to leave the house near Los Angeles. Filled the longing with wine and filled Marlene with new letters. Sometimes they met. Marlene swore that she loved him as best she could, but rather, allowed herself to be loved, and again it seemed to him that happiness was possible. In a state of depression, he lived until meeting in 1951 with Polett Goddard.
Erich Maria Remarque existed in agony and mental anxiety, whose biography suddenly made a happy turn.
New creative good luck
After the publication of The Arc de Triomphe, he did not write for a long time. But with Paulette, he began to work again. In 1952, The Spark of Life, a novel dedicated to a sister destroyed by the Nazis, was released. In 1954, a new work was published, "Time to Live and Time to Die." In 1956, in the novel "The Black Obelisk," Remarque will describe the real events of his youth. All this time, Paulette Goddard is nearby. In this pair, Remarque allowed himself to be loved. Their wedding will take place in 1958, as will their return to Switzerland.
So in the fifties, on a creative lift, a biography of Remarque takes place. In short, the writer will create two more novels: Life on Borrow (1959) and Night in Lisbon (1963).
Homeland Awards
Germany appreciates that she has such an outstanding contemporary writer. The government even awards it with an order, but, as if in mockery, citizenship does not return. This forced acknowledgment of merit does not inspire respect. Living in Switzerland, Erich Maria Remarque, whose brief biography flipped over seventy-two years, is already more worried about her health under the supervision of his wife. When he quietly dies of a heart attack in a Swiss hospital, Marlene Dietrich will send roses to his funeral. But Paulette forbids putting them on the coffin.
He is only respected in Germany today, but he is still popular in Russia. The circulation of his books is approximately five million copies. These are the biography and creativity of Remarque. In our country they love and read it.