Arthur R.G. Solmssen

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Arthur R.G. Solmssen (September 29, 1928 in New York City[1] – April 23, 2018, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania[2]) was an American lawyer and novelist.

History[]

Arthur R.G. Solmssen spent his early childhood in Berlin, and his adolescence and later youth in the suburbs of Philadelphia.[1] His uncle was German banker Georg Solmssen, his ancestor was the German banker Joseph Mendelssohn. He studied at Harvard University, where he earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1950, and the University of Pennsylvania, where he completed his law degree in 1953.[1] He was called to the Pennsylvania Bar in 1953 and commenced working as a lawyer in Philadelphia. His professional affiliation is Of Counsel to Saul Ewing LLP.[3]

Solmssen has published several novels, the most famous of which is A Princess in Berlin (1980). Solmssen received the Athenaeum Literary Award for the novel.[4] A Princess in Berlin is a portrait of the early Weimar Republic, and has been the subject of multiple translations.[5] Solmssen's works are catalogued by the German National Library, among others.[6]

The Comfort Letter, Solmssen's 1975 novel concerning ethics and assurances in public offerings, has been the subject of contemporary academic analysis in law.[7]

Solmssen was a Fellow of the Salzburg Global Seminar, with which he maintained an active association.[8]

He recently finished a book about German Luftwaffe pilot and general officer Ernst Udet.

Solmssen has three sons, Peter York Solmssen, Kurt A. Solmssen, and A.R.G. Solmssen Junior.

Bibliography[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Profile of Arthur Solmssen; www.acamedia.info.
  2. ^ "ARTHUR SOLMSSEN's Obituary on New York Times". New York Times. Retrieved 2018-07-08.
  3. ^ Martindale Lawyer Profile; www.martindale.com
  4. ^ List of Athenaeum Award recipients; www.philaathenaeum.org.
  5. ^ For example, Une princesse à Berlin, Éditions Robert Laffont, 1982.
  6. ^ Arthur Solmssen German Wikipedia article; www.de.wikipedia.org.
  7. ^ Richard W. Painter (University of Minnesota), "Irrationality and Cognitive Bias at a Closing in Arthur Solmssen's The Comfort Letter", 69 Fordham Law Review 1111 (2000) (Annual Ethics Symposium), reprinted in 34 285-311 (2002). Solmssen is also referenced by Richard H. Weisberg in "Wigmore and the Law and Literature Movement". Law and Literature 21:1 (Spring, 2009), 129-145; www.caliber.ucpress.net, with reference to John Wigmore.
  8. ^ See Memories of Salzburg: Evening Social for Salsburg Global Fellows; www.salzburgglobal.org.
  9. ^ Paperback edition by Hodder and Stoughton, 1970.
  10. ^ Paperback edition by Pocket Books, 1973.
  11. ^ Paperback editions by Ballantine Books, 1981; Penguin Books, 1982.
  12. ^ Paperback edition by , 2000.

External links[]

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