Arnold Zweig (1887–1968)
Author of The Case of Sergeant Grischa
About the Author
Arnold Zweig was president of the Academy of Arts in East Germany.
Image credit: Deutsche Post der DDR / Wikimedia Commons
Series
Works by Arnold Zweig
Komm her, wir lieben dich. Briefe einer ungewöhnlichen Freundschaft zu dritt (1996) — Author — 3 copies
"Im Anfang war die Tat" : Arnold Zweigs "Beil von Wandsbek" ; Roman einer Welt - Welt eines Romans (1986) 3 copies
Vikerkaar : [novellid] 3 copies
Knaben und Männer 3 copies
Gerufene Schatten 3 copies
Pont und Anna 3 copies
Erzaehlungen by Arnold Zweig 1 copy
Fahrt zum Acheron 1 copy
DER ELFENBEINFÄCHER 1 copy
Das ostjüdische antlitz 1 copy
Sangre y vida 1 copy
Dramen Band XIII 1 copy
Novellen erster Band Band XI 1 copy
Ritualmord in Ungarn 1 copy
Zwölf Novellen 1 copy
Novellen 1 copy
Frühe Fährten 1 copy
A Balaam 1 copy
Umilkły działa 1 copy
Ein starker Esser 1 copy
Associated Works
75 Short Masterpieces: Stories from the World's Literature (1961) — Contributor — 317 copies, 2 reviews
The Jewish caravan : great stories of twenty-five centuries (1965) — Contributor, some editions — 140 copies
Never-Ending Tales: Stories from the Golden Age of Jewish Literature (2025) — Contributor — 8 copies
Neun Holzschnitte zu ausgewahlten Versen aus dem Buche Jeschu Ben Elieser Ben sirah — Introduction — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Zweig, Arnold
- Legal name
- Zweig, Arnold
- Birthdate
- 1887-11-10
- Date of death
- 1968-11-26
- Gender
- male
- Education
- University of Breslau
Berlin University
Göttingen University
University of Rostock
University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
Munich University - Occupations
- editor (newspaper)
writer
activist - Organizations
- German Army (WWI)
- Awards and honors
- Lenin Peace Prize (1958)
- Nationality
- Germany
- Birthplace
- Glogau, Silesia, Germany
- Places of residence
- Berlin, Germany
Palestine - Place of death
- East Berlin, German Democratic Republic
- Burial location
- Dorotheenstädtischer Friedhof, Berlin, Germany
- Associated Place (for map)
- Germany
Members
Discussions
Group Read, May 2018: The Case of Sergeant Grischa in 1001 Books to read before you die (May 2018)
Reviews
The story takes place during World War I on the Eastern Front.
Main Character: Sergeant Grischa Paprotkin, a Russian soldier of German descent, who has deserted from the Russian army. After crossing into German-held territory, Grischa is captured but holds false papers identifying him as a German civilian, Josef Blaukopf. His true identity is eventually uncovered, leading to a complex legal and moral dilemma.The novel explores the absurdity and cruelty of military bureaucracy, where Grischa show more becomes a victim of the system rather than of war itself.
It questions the morality of military justice, especially through the characters involved in Grischa's trial, who represent various stances on duty, humanity, and law.
National Identity and Loyalty: Grischa's dual identity (Russian by citizenship but German by ethnicity) adds layers to the narrative about where one's true loyalties lie in times of conflict.
Grischa Paprotkin: The protagonist, caught in a web of military law.
The novel was critically acclaimed for its realistic portrayal of the human condition amidst war. It was part of Zweig's broader critique of German militarism and society, which became even more poignant after the rise of the Nazis. show less
Main Character: Sergeant Grischa Paprotkin, a Russian soldier of German descent, who has deserted from the Russian army. After crossing into German-held territory, Grischa is captured but holds false papers identifying him as a German civilian, Josef Blaukopf. His true identity is eventually uncovered, leading to a complex legal and moral dilemma.The novel explores the absurdity and cruelty of military bureaucracy, where Grischa show more becomes a victim of the system rather than of war itself.
It questions the morality of military justice, especially through the characters involved in Grischa's trial, who represent various stances on duty, humanity, and law.
National Identity and Loyalty: Grischa's dual identity (Russian by citizenship but German by ethnicity) adds layers to the narrative about where one's true loyalties lie in times of conflict.
Grischa Paprotkin: The protagonist, caught in a web of military law.
The novel was critically acclaimed for its realistic portrayal of the human condition amidst war. It was part of Zweig's broader critique of German militarism and society, which became even more poignant after the rise of the Nazis. show less
De Vriendt kehrt heim : Roman / mit einem Nachwort van Hans-Albert Walter : ein Fall von Vatermord oder Bilanz der palästinensischen Judenheit anno 1932 by Arnold Zweig
An intriguing and suspenseful novel about the situation in the 1920s British Mandate Palestine. In his afterword, Hans-Albert Walter expressly does not want to see the novel as a key novel in which De Vriendt symbolizes the Dutch gay writer and Zionist and later anti-Zionist Jacob Israel de Haan. In my opinion, Hans-Albert Walter analyzes the novel almost to death in his admittedly very elaborate afterword in which he without any reluctance relates Sigmund Freud's views on the neurotic show more background of homosexuality to the protagonist (and mind you, written in 1995!). show less
I thought Arnold Zweig's novel "The Case of Sergrant Grischa" was a good story, though it kind of dragged on a bit too long in the middle (especially when the conclusion seemed to be so obvious.)
Grischa is a Russian prisoner of war, who walks away from his camp and gets caught up in a troop of German soldiers in a case of mistaken identity. Unfortunately, his new identity is that of a deserter, so things aren't so rosy there either.
This book get reminding me of "Forest of the Hanged" even show more though plotwise, they aren't super similiar -- and I just kept thinking I'd rather be reading "Forest of the Hanged." Overall, this was an okay book but not one I feel particularly strongly about. show less
Grischa is a Russian prisoner of war, who walks away from his camp and gets caught up in a troop of German soldiers in a case of mistaken identity. Unfortunately, his new identity is that of a deserter, so things aren't so rosy there either.
This book get reminding me of "Forest of the Hanged" even show more though plotwise, they aren't super similiar -- and I just kept thinking I'd rather be reading "Forest of the Hanged." Overall, this was an okay book but not one I feel particularly strongly about. show less
Biography of Cathay Williams, an African-American woman who disguised herself as a man and joined the Army, serving in one of the famous "Buffalo Soldier" units during the Indian Wars. Author Phillip Thomas Tucker has attempted the impossible – to write a full length biography of the sole female African American Buffalo Soldier, Cathay (or as he refers to her Cathy) Williams. The former slave Cathay Williams was not surprisingly illiterate, as were her family and friends. Thus very little show more documentation exists on her early life. The first documents known to historians that pertain to Cathay Williams involve her enlistment in the U.S. Army immediately after the Civil War. Terse military records chronicle her enlistment, her hospitalizations for illness and her eventual discharge, after a period of about 2 years service. The rest of her life is similarly scarcely documented and consists of a marriage record, a pension application and a brief interview done with a newspaper reporter in 1890. With these barest bones of an outline, historian Phillip Thomas Tucker has attempted to write a 250 -page biography. He is consequently forced to indulge in a massive amount of supposition - "she may have," "she could have," "she very well might have," "others in her place frequently did," and "it is possible that she thought." This historian found page after page of unsupported suppositions and might-have-beens both sad and frustrating, because it would be a wonderful thing to be able to have, on the shelf, a full length, informative biography of such an interesting and undoubtedly unique woman. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 72
- Also by
- 11
- Members
- 956
- Popularity
- #26,956
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 11
- ISBNs
- 116
- Languages
- 9
- Favorited
- 3




















