Eric Maria Remarque is a world-renowned German novelist. There are very few readers who have not read his responsive novel All Quiet on the Western Front. The tensions in the minds of ordinary people and soldiers in the post-war and post-war life have probably not been better described by anyone than Remarque. During the war, the story of human separation and its aftermath came to life in the ink of his pen.His books have touched the hearts of people all over the country and abroad in painful, poetic language. Although untouched in his homeland, his writings have been accepted by millions of people around the world.
Eric was born on June 22, 1897, in Osnabrুকck, Germany, to a Roman Catholic family. Peter Franz Remark, father of book-binders by profession, and Anna Maria, mother. The only son in the family of three is Remark, the elder sister Arna and the younger sister Alfrid. Remark, who was born in a poor house, had to change his house eleven times in his childhood in search of fortune. He joined the University of Monster. I think I had a strong desire to be a teacher. But luck did not allow it to happen again.
Entering the battlefield
Germany became involved in World War I in support of Austria-Hungary. He was forced to join the army at the age of 18 at the call of his fatherland. On June 12, 1918, he was transferred to the Second Company on the Western Battlefield. On 26 June Kishore Remark was sent to the 2nd Company of the 15th Reserve Infantry Regiment. There he took part in the trench battles of the towns of Torhout and Houthalst. He witnessed the cruelty of the people, the cries of war and the cries of the wounded.
It didn't take long for the accident to happen to his forehead. On July 31, 1918, Shell's shrapnel struck and struck his left leg, right arm and neck. He was quickly removed from the battlefield and transferred to a German military hospital. He spent the rest of the war there recovering his wreckage.