In 1932 he joined the
S. Fischer Verlag (a well established publishing house), initially as editor of the
Neue Rundschau, a literary magazine. In 1933 he joined the company's board. In 1935 he married
Annemarie Seidel, who had started a career as an actress but been obliged to retire on health grounds. A year later the
S. Fischer Verlag company was split when
Gottfried Bermann Fischer moved (initially) to
Vienna, taking part of the business with him. Part of the business had to remain in Germany, being purchased by Peter Suhrkamp, who would continue to lead it till he was accused of
high treason and arrested by the
Gestapo in April 1944. The legal process continued till early in 1945, when he was placed in "
protective custody" (a euphemism then much in vogue in Germany) in the
concentration camp at
Sachsenhausen-Oranienburg. Two weeks later, suffering from a serious lung disease, he was released. Several celebrities from the world of culture and the arts had approached members of
the Führer's inner circle, to urge Suhrkamp's release. These included the sculptor
Arno Breker, who had intervened with
Albert Speer, the writer
Gerhart Hauptmann, who had invoked support from
Baldur von Schirach, and the writer
Hans Carossa, who had approached
Ernst Kaltenbrunner. After the
German surrender, on 8 October 1945 Suhrkamp received the first publishing license from the British Military Government in Berlin and began rebuilding the company. He cooperated with
Bermann Fischer (who had operated as a publisher during the war in New York City), publishing some of his authors, under licence, in Germany. Suhrkamp and Fischer discussed a reintegration of the two businesses that had split when the political situation had obliged Fisher to leave Germany back in 1936. There was talk of refounding
S. Fischer Verlag in
Frankfurt am Main. In due course Fischer was re-established in Frankfurt, but there was a rift between Fischer and Suhrkamp over the future of the business. Following an out-of-court settlement, it was Bermann Fischer who recovered the Frankfurt publishing business that carried his name and Peter Suhrkamp who left to establish, in 1950, his own publishing house,
Suhrkamp Verlag. ==Suhrkamp Verlag==