Günther Krupkat

Günther Krupkat
Born July 5, 1905
Berlin
Died April 14, 1990
Berlin
Occupation author
Language German
Nationality German
Genres Science Fiction

Günther Krupkat (5 July 1905, Berlin – 14 April 1990, Berlin) was a German fiction writer, known as one of the leading science fiction writers of East Germany.

Contents

Biography

Born in Berlin in 1905, Krupkat studied engineering before dropping out for lack of means to support himself. He wrote his first novel, Od, at age 19, having been inspired by Soviet writer Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy's 1923 novel Aelita. Its publication in pre-war Germany was rejected due to the leftist ideas propounded by Krupkat.

Active in the Communist Resistance against the Third Reich, Krupkat fled to Czechoslovakia at the close of the Second World War. He settled in the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) after the Nazis' defeat, writing science fiction stories, screenplays, and novels, first fully devoting himself to a writer's career in the mid-1950s, following a decade of working as an editor.

Krupkat became chairman of the East German Writers Union's Science Fiction Working Group upon its formation in 1972. He was succeeded by Heiner Rank in 1978.[1]

Works

Novels

Stories

References

  1. ^ Simon, Erik, and Olaf R. Spittel. Science-fiction: Personalia zu einem Genre in der DDR. Berlin: Verlag Das Neue Berlin, 1982. Pp. 25-27. (German)

Bibliography