Recently at the Feldkirch Theater am Saumarkt. Armin Thurnher gave a reading from his new book, "Unsternstunden der Menschheit" (Misfortunes of Disaster). The theater was packed. Anyone who hadn't reserved a ticket couldn't get in. Although it was a hometown gig for Thurnher, who hails from Bregenz, he was clearly overwhelmed: "150 people, more than 30 books signed, even poetry collections! Even established figures like..."
This story is only covered by news sources that have yet to be evaluated by the independent media monitoring agencies we use to assess the quality and reliability of news outlets on our platform. Learn more here.
Recently at the Feldkirch Theater am Saumarkt. Armin Thurnher gave a reading from his new book, "Unsternstunden der Menschheit" (Misfortunes of Disaster). The theater was packed. Anyone who hadn't reserved a ticket couldn't get in. Although it was a hometown gig for Thurnher, who hails from Bregenz, he was clearly overwhelmed: "150 people, more than 30 books signed, even poetry collections! Even established figures like..."