Swiss author Friedrich D�rrenmatt (1921-1990) created darkly comic works exposing modern society's absurdities. Born to a Protestant pastor, he combined existential philosophy with detective fiction elements in masterpieces like "The Visit" and "The Physicists." His writing fearlessly explored moral corruption and collective guilt during the Cold War era. Despite struggling with depression, D�rrenmatt maintained a mordant wit that made his apocalyptic visions both terrifying and wickedly entertaining, inspiring artists to use dark humor as a vehicle for profound social critique.

"The rightful claim to dissent is an existential right of the individual."



"There are risks which are not acceptable: the destruction of humanity is one of them."



"The evolution of humans can not only be seen as the grand total of their wars; it is also defined by the evolution of the human mind and the development of the human consciousness."



"The difference between humans and wild animals is that humans pray before they commit murder."



"We do not consider patriotism desirable if it contradicts civilized behavior."



"Today's difference between Russia and the United States is that in Russia everybody takes everybody else for a spy, and in the United States everybody takes everybody else for a criminal."



"The art of the cuisine, when fully mastered, is the one human capability of which only good things can be said."

