Gert Fritz Unger (born: March 23, 1921 in Breslau; died: August 3, 2005 in Weilburg) was a German writer and author of Wild West novels.
After studying mechanical engineering, Unger won German youth swimming competitions at the end of the 1930s. He served in the German submarine force as a torpedo mechanic at the outbreak of World War II and ended up as a British prisoner of war.
After returning to Germany, Unger moved to the Ruhr region and initially worked as a fitter and craftsman in Gelsenkirchen; one of his first jobs was repairing the defective clock at Buer town hall. Later, he was responsible for major projects as a site manager at the Siemens company.
In 1949, Unger took part in a competition organized by the Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk radio station and won first prize with his entry for a detective radio play, whereupon he began writing novels in his spare time and later concentrated on the genre of the Western. Initially, however, Unger wrote sea adventures - inspired by his time in the Navy. At the request of his publisher, he put his first Western on paper. [1] At Uta Publishing, Unger collaborated on the Billy Jenkins, Tom Prox, and Pete series of novels and wrote his first independent western. From 1951 he was a full-time writer. In 1960, Unger moved from the Ruhr region to Weilburg in Hesse. From 1972, Bastei-Verlag published his novels, including in the series Western-Bestseller von G.F. Unger with numerous cover motifs by the Spanish painter and artist Vicente B. Ballestar, and from 1973 Unger was given his own series by Zauberkreis Verlag.
At the height of his activity, Unger wrote a novel almost weekly; later, this number dropped to six new novels a year, which were always first published in paperback before being reprinted in the magazine novel. On August 3, 2005, Unger died of a short, serious illness at the age of 84.
After Unger's death, Bastei-Verlag published not only new editions of two series in booklet format and one series in paperback format, but also ten paperbacks with the imprint "Neuer Roman" ("New Novel"), although none of these novels bore any reference to the author's passing. All of them were manuscripts that Unger had completed before his death.
Unger's publications can be found in various publishing houses, including Zauberkreis, Pabel, Indra, and Kelter. At first, he wrote mostly rental books for the commercial lending libraries that prospered in the 1950s, which were later reprinted as staple novels. Later, when the paperback market gained a strong foothold, Unger managed to gain a foothold there. Except for his early contributions from the 1950s to the Billy Jenkins and Tom Prox series, for which he wrote a total of about 25 booklets, probably only one of his novels (Skull Ranch Volume 1) was originally published as a booklet. Normally - contrary to Unger's current image as a booklet novelist - his 742 Westerns were first published in book form, namely as a rental book or paperback, and only the reprints appeared as novel booklets.
In addition to his civil name, Unger used various pseudonyms for his publications, such as G. F. Bucket or A. F. Peters. However, it is a widespread misconception that Unger hides behind all "G. F." pseudonyms. For example, G. F. Barner, G. F. Wego and G. F. Waco stand for Gerhard Friedrich Basner.
Due to the high total circulation of his works, he became the most successful German-language Western author. At the same time, he is the first and, besides Thomas Jeier and Alfred Wallon, the only German-language Western author whose works were published as translations in the USA. [2] The numerous reprints and new editions of the approximately 742 Western novels and others exceed more than 300 million copies. [3]
Unger's novels, when told in the third person, are written in the present tense, while those told in the first person are in the past tense. His stories follow cowboys as protagonists in defending and maintaining honor. Thus, in Unger's understanding, a Western is "the lonely struggle of a single man against a destiny."
Unger's literary role models included Mark Twain, Jack London and Louis L'Amour, according to his own statements. [4]
Donald Allen Wollheim was an American science fiction editor, publisher, writer, and fan. As an author, he published under his own name as well as under pseudonyms, including David Grinnell, Martin Pearson, and Darrell G. Raynor. A founding member of the Futurians, he was a leading influence on science fiction development and fandom in the 20th-century United States. Ursula K. Le Guin called Wollheim "the tough, reliable editor of Ace Books, in the Late Pulpalignean Era, 1966 and '67", which is when he published her first two novels in Ace Double editions.
Pulp magazines were inexpensive fiction magazines that were published from 1896 until around 1955. The term "pulp" derives from the wood pulp paper on which the magazines were printed, due to their cheap nature. In contrast, magazines printed on higher-quality paper were called "glossies" or "slicks". The typical pulp magazine had 128 pages; it was 7 inches (18 cm) wide by 10 inches (25 cm) high, and 0.5 inches (1.3 cm) thick, with ragged, untrimmed edges. Pulps were the successors to the penny dreadfuls, dime novels, and short-fiction magazines of the 19th century.
Allan Wesley Eckert was an American novelist and playwright who specialized in historical novels for adults and children, and was also a naturalist. His novel Incident at Hawk's Hill (1971) was initially marketed to adults and selected by Reader's Digest Condensed Books. A runner-up for the Newbery Medal, it was afterward marketed as a children's novel and adapted by Disney for a television movie known as The Boy Who Talked to Badgers (1975).
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Stained Glass is an American spy thriller novel by William F. Buckley, Jr., the second of eleven novels in the Blackford Oakes series. Its first paperback edition won a 1980 National Book Award in the one-year category Mystery (paperback).
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Helmut Rellergerd, known by the pen name Jason Dark, is a prolific author of horror detective fiction in the German language. He is known for creating the long-running dime novel series Geisterjäger John Sinclair, which has been ongoing since 1973 and is released weekly since 1978. As of 2020, the John Sinclair series sold more than 250 million novel copies and over 5 million audio drama units.
Conjure Wife (1943) is a supernatural horror novel by American writer Fritz Leiber. Its premise is that witchcraft flourishes as an open secret among women. The story is told from the point of view of a small-town college professor who discovers that his wife is a witch.
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Vicenç Badalona Ballestar was a Spanish painter and author.
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Willi Voss and sometimes writing under the pseudonym E. W. Pless, is a German laborer, librarian, and journalist. In the 1970s he was known as a far right ideologue and Neo-Nazi and an arms procurer for the Palestinian Liberation Organization, and was involved in the 1972 Summer Olympics Munich Massacre.
[[Category:2005 deaths]] [[Category:1921 births]] [[Category:German-language literature]] [[Category:Adventure novels]]