Sturmzeichen

audiobook

Sturmzeichen

by Richard Skowronnek

DE·~7 hours·12 chapters

Chapters

12 total
1

Sturmzeichen

0:07
2

Sturmzeichen

1:17
3

1.

25:53
4

2.

52:42
5

3.

1:05:55
6

4.

34:49
7

5.

54:11
8

6.

58:09
9

7.

17:16
10

8.

44:54

Description

Amid the restless streets of Berlin at the outbreak of the Great War, the novel opens with a vivid portrait of a city caught between the clamor of headlines and the quiet resolve of its citizens. A veteran of the General Staff steps out onto the dusk‑lit Königsplatz, his thoughts already tangled in the reports of battles far from home. Through his eyes the reader feels the tension between the patriotic fervor that fuels the nation and the lingering shadows of a fragile peace.

A sprightly newspaper boy darts through the crowd, shouting the latest dispatches about Bulgarian victories and Turkish retreats, while a gruff street‑cleaner chuckles at the exaggerations of the press. Their banter reveals a skeptical undercurrent, hinting that not everything printed can be taken at face value. Together they embody the everyday people whose lives are being reshaped by distant conflicts they barely comprehend.

Against this backdrop, the story explores themes of loyalty, the stubborn endurance of ordinary folk, and the looming sense of destiny that the war brings. It paints a portrait of a homeland bruised yet unbroken, poised to rise from the wreckage with a renewed, if uneasy, strength. Listeners will be drawn into a world where personal grit meets the tide of history, setting the stage for the dramatic events to come.

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Details

Language

de

Duration

~7 hours (448K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Norbert H. Langkau, Constanze Hofmann and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2008-01-07

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Richard Skowronnek

Richard Skowronnek

1862–1932

A German journalist, dramatist, and novelist from East Prussia, he drew many of his stories from rural life, hunting culture, officers' circles, and student duels. His fiction was popular in its day, with works such as Sturmzeichen and Das große Feuer reaching a wide readership.

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