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1 de may. de 2020 · The Princess Bride's story is credited to one S. Morgenstern, but in truth, this is a total lie: there is no S. Morgenstern, and his non-existence is a part of the lore behind William Goldman's Princess Bride novel.
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Simon "S." Morgenstern is the original author of The Princess Bride, and a native of the fictional country of Florin.
Author William Goldman presents the novel as being an abridged version of Morgenstern's original tale by himself.
•Goldman wrote another novel, The Silent Gondoliers, under the pen name of Morgenstern.
•The name may be a reference to Johann Carl Simon Morgenstern, who coined the term Bildungsroman, describing the genre of story.
1.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Goldman
The Princess Bride: S. Morgenstern's Classic Tale of True Love and High Adventure, The "Good Parts" Version is a 1973 fantasy romance novel by American writer William Goldman. The book combines elements of comedy, adventure , fantasy, drama, romance, and fairy tale .
- William Goldman
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- 1973
- 1973
He claimed in these letters that he was being sued by the Morgenstern estate, and that this was keeping him from releasing any further works from that world: RIP William Goldman. This is the letter he sent to readers keen to know about the missing ‘reunion scene’ in The Princess Bride.
S. Morgenstern Character Analysis. Miracle Max. The fictional Florinese author who, right after World War One, published his self-proclaimed classic The Princess Bride. Goldman says in the introduction to The Princess Bride (i.e. the real-life novel that Goldman wrote) that the original version is about 1000 pages long and though it includes ...
Samuel Morgenstern (1875 in Budapest – August 1943 in Łódź Ghetto) was an Austrian businessman and a business partner of the young Adolf Hitler in his time in Vienna (1908–1913).
(The Princess Bridge) question. I know S. Morgenstern isn't actually real, but I was wondering what people thought about William Goldman inventing this fictional author of the Princess Bride. Do you think S. Morgenstern is an interesting device in the novel, or do you feel it detracts from the proper story?