
Best Klartext products in the Reference books category
On this page you'll find a ranking of the best Klartext products in this category. To give you a quick overview, we've already ranked the most important information about the products for you.
1. Klartext Hömma!
The language of the Ruhr area is Germany's youngest and most vibrant dialect, which has never been kept "pure" or "cultivated." Between the Ruhr and Lippe, people say what they mean: syllable-saving, direct, and tender. It’s a language that loves to deflate show-offs but also expresses genuine fear and philosophizes about life. This can be found in this dictionary with over 1,600 entries, wonderful examples, an entertaining grammar, and the first tale from Max and Moritz, as Wilhelm Busch would have written it in the Ruhr area.

2. Klartext Star Trek
Hard to believe, but true: The Star Trek hype has been around for over 50 years and it continues to this day. In 1972, ZDF aired the first episode of Starship Enterprise on German television. However, the end of the science fiction saga is still far from sight. Author Ralph Sander shares insights from the galactic sewing box in his book and answers a variety of questions that every Trekkie has surely pondered at some point. Did you know that Star Trek almost never made it to the air? And that Captain Kirk was not the first captain of the Enterprise? Or that Space Patrol was not actually the German television's answer to Starship Enterprise? And that Star Wars was not the trigger for the first Star Trek movie? Trekkies, take note, there's something here to marvel at intergalactically!.

3. Klartext Sherlock Holmes
He is one of the most popular detectives in literary and television history: Sherlock Holmes. But do you know why today's iconic and widely recognized image of Sherlock Holmes is actually incorrect, what influence Sherlock Holmes had on criminal forensics, or what other pop culture phenomena have influenced the character? Nicole Glücklich explores why everyone knows Sherlock Holmes, but only a few are familiar with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and what role Watson plays. She discusses the famous Sherlock Holmes fans throughout history and highlights the places that every Sherlock Holmes fan should definitely visit.

4. Klartext IndustrieInsekten
Insects are fascinating. Their habitats are as diverse as their appearance and abilities. However, the population has been declining for many years. Both biomass and biodiversity are therefore threatened. But why are insects actually important, where do they occur and how do they influence the environment almost unnoticed?
These and other questions are addressed in the catalogue &bdquo,IndustrieInsekten&ldquo,. Here you can meet the six-legged creatures at eye level and get very close to them. Breathtaking and sometimes dramatic photographs were taken on the eight sites of the LWL Industrial Museum.
The photographers Ute Matzkows and Klaus Rieboldt take us into an often unnoticed microcosm and show the beauty and diversity of insects in an unknown land.

5. Klartext Bremen
Bremen proudly displays its key in the coat of arms and sees itself as a cosmopolitan metropolis. Celebrated as the "Rome of the North," the bishopric on the Weser River gained recognition because Charlemagne subdued and converted the Saxons in costly battles. Its town musicians and the Roland are widely known – but what else comes to mind besides the fairy tale and legendary hero? In his book, Andreas Rumler tells of repeatedly relocated ports, of Red Sand and Blue Haze, and clarifies many clichés. Follow a connoisseur of the city and discover Bremen from a completely new perspective!.

6. Klartext Die Kölner Kontroverse
The Cologne controversy: Legends and facts about the Nazi crimes in Cologne-Ehrenfeld.

7. Klartext Philip Feldhordt
Everyone probably knows Beethoven's Ninth. The fact that the composer was deaf is also fairly well known. But did you also know that Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata used to be called the 'Summerhouse Sonata'? That 'Beethoven' is the most frequently used name for streets and squares worldwide? And do you know what Helge Schneider or the Toten Hosen have in common with Beethoven? 'Beethoven für Klugscheißer' shows unknown sides of the composer, provides exciting facts and bizarre background information on the life and work of the musician. Find out where the rubbish collection service plays Beethoven when it rolls through the streets and what 'Camper van Beethoven' is all about, so that you can have your say in the anniversary year!

8. Klartext Eichsfeld
Silvana Tismer was born and raised in Heiligenstadt. She is wholeheartedly from Eichsfeld and considers it a true blessing to pursue her calling as a journalist in the place she calls home. Since 2016, she has been leading the joint local editorial team of Thüringer Allgemeine and Thüringische Landeszeitung in Eichsfeld. Although Mirko Krüger lives in Erfurt, he cannot imagine life without Eichsfeld. Fortunately, part of his family lives here, providing him with purring, field sparrows, and Stracke. He is the author and publisher of numerous books about Thuringia.

9. Klartext Frank Thiessies
David Bowie is considered one of the musical superstars. Few other artists have been as versatile and have constantly reinvented themselves. Whether as a singer, composer, or actor, David Bowie consistently set new standards. He was a globetrotter, calling Berlin, London, and New York home, but suffered from a fear of flying, which often led him to travel on the luxury liner Queen Elizabeth 2. Frank Thiessies shares this and other anecdotes in his book. Did you know that Bowie's very first demo recording was rediscovered in a bread basket? Or that David Bowie not only acted himself but also voiced a character in the animated series "SpongeBob"? And that a spider was named after him – and why? Discover one of the most versatile artists of the 20th century in a whole new light!.

10. Klartext Preussen
Hohenzollern, Bismarck, and German punctuality – when one thinks of Prussia, such attributes immediately come to mind. But what was Prussia actually? Few topics are surrounded by as many myths as well as serious facts. Was Prussia "just" a state, or was there a Prussian "people"? Was the Prussian eagle the emblem of a "militaristic" authoritarian state that held Germany in its claws and was responsible for the catastrophes of the 20th century? Or was it a state of law and culture, from which the Federal Republic still benefits today? And how much of Prussia is hidden in our everyday lives? Are the readers of these lines perhaps more Prussian than they think?.
