Hermann Ungar

Hermann Ungar (April 20, 1893 in Boskovice – October 28, 1929 in Prague) was a Czech-Jewish[1][2] writer (in the German language) and an officer in Czechoslovakia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

After service in World War I, where he sustained serious injuries on the Galician Front, he passed the state examination and received his degree in 1918.

While there, he began to associate with a literary circle that included Franz Kafka, Max Brod and Ernst Weiß.

[4] According to a 2012 obituary of Tom (who had changed his name to Unwin), his father "wrote about sex and psychosis in a manner that shocked the establishment".

Dieter Sudhoff, Hermann Ungar Leben-Werk-Wirkung Verlag Königshausen und Neumann Wurzburg, 1990, 700pp.

Hermann Ungar (before 1929)