About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 24. Chapters: Hans Fritzsche, Herbert Gronemeyer, Wolfgang Clement, Alfred Keller, Jamiri, Andrey Osterman, Gershon Kingsley, Hermann-Friedrich Joppien, Manfred Eigen, Joel Matip, Otto Schily, Ernst Kasemann, Hermann Gerland, Mark Warnecke, Franz Kieslich, Annike Krahn, Hans-Gunter Etterich, Wilhelm-Ferdinand Galland, Friedhelm Busse, Eckhard Stratmann-Mertens, Siegfried Balke, Dieter Versen, Matthias Ostrzolek, Heinz Kaminski, Marc Rzatkowski, Hans-Jurgen Bradler, Helmut Bergmann, Thomas Hermanns, Michael Stuckmann, Heinrich Hogrebe, Rolf Bering, Klemens Behler, Ute Thimm, Frank Heinemann, Norbert Lammert, Dirk Riechmann, Carl Arnold Kortum, Yuki Stalph, Frank Goosen, Tim Sandtler, Michael Fietz, Jill Vernekohl, Annegret Kroniger, Marc Weber, Ingo Naujoks, Maria Rowohlt. Excerpt: Herbert Arthur Wiglev Clamor Gronemeyer (born April 12, 1956) is a German musician and actor, popular in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. He starred as war correspondent Lieutenant Werner in Wolfgang Petersen's movie Das Boot, but later concentrated on his musical career. His fifth album 4630 Bochum (1984) and his 20th album Mensch (Human) (2002) are the best-selling German-language records of all time. Gronemeyer often refers to his personal roots as lying in the German town of Bochum where he spent most of his childhood, youth and early adulthood. Still today, the song Bochum, first released in 1984, is one of his signature songs, especially during live performances. Being born in Gottingen and not in Bochum he has his own explanation: "I was only born in Gottingen because my mother often fainted when she was pregnant with me. She did this every time she turned to her left side, and no one believed her. In Gottingen there was a professor, a specialist, and he didn't believe her either, at which point she lay down, fainted, and brought me into the wor...