The prestigious literary award recognizes the best new novel in the German language. A record number of works were submitted for consideration this year.
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"This year, the jury had more titles to choose from than ever before in the history of the German Book Prize," jury spokesperson Knut Cordsen, culture editor for German public broadcaster Bayerischer Rundfunk, said in a press release on Tuesday, as the longlist for the award was revealed.
The jury for the German Book Prize 2021 has selected 20 titles among this year's 230 submissions — works which have been published (or will be published) between October 2020 and September 21, 2021, when the shortlist will be announced.
A quarter of the books submitted were debut novels, added Cordsen, offering "a broad bouquet of new literary voices."
Debut authors include Austrian author Ferdinand Schmalz, who won the Ingeborg-Bachmann Prize in 2017, as well as Mithu Sanyal, already renowned for her cultural essays on identity and gender politics.
The jury spokesperson also pointed out that a broad range of novels had been recognized through their selection, one which features "narrative experimentation alongside realistic novels, the comic and the surreal," said Cordsen. "These 20 books take into account origins and history as well as questions that are of central importance in the present."
The nominated novels (in alphabetical order) are:
Henning Ahrens: Mitgift
Shida Bazyar: Drei Kameradinnen
Dietmar Dath: Gentzen oder: Betrunken aufräumen
Franzobel: Die Eroberung Amerikas
Georges-Arthur Goldschmidt: Der versperrte Weg
Dana Grigorcea: Die nicht sterben
Norbert Gstrein: Der zweite Jakob
Dilek Güngör: Vater und ich
Monika Helfer: Vati
Felicitas Hoppe: Die Nibelungen
Peter Karoshi: Zu den Elefanten
Christian Kracht: Eurotrash
Thomas Kunst: Zandschower Klinken
Gert Loschütz: Besichtigung eines Unglücks
Yulia Marfutova: Der Himmel vor hundert Jahren
Sasha Marianna Salzmann: Im Menschen muss alles herrlich sein
Mithu Sanyal: Identitti
Ferdinand Schmalz: Mein Lieblingstier heißt Winter
Antje Rávik Strubel: Blaue Frau
Heinz Strunk: Es ist immer so schön mit dir
Awarded by the Börsenverein des Deutschen Buchhandels (German Publishers & Booksellers Association), the German Book Prize winner will be revealed at a ceremony held during the Frankfurt Book Fair on October 18, 2021.
The winning novelist will receive €25,000 ($29,350), while €2,500 goes to each of the five other shortlisted authors.
9 German books that were adapted into great movies
Perfume, a best-selling book, was first adapted into a film — and now a TV series. Here's a selection of the most successful or best film renditions of novels by German authors.
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Perfume: The Story of a Murderer
It took 20 years before Patrick Süskind's 1985 bestselling historical fantasy novel Perfume: The Story of a Murderer was finally turned into a movie. Director Tom Tykwer carried it off magnificently, with entertaining, sumptuous scenes starring Ben Whishaw and Karoline Herfurth.
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Das Boot
"One of the greatest war films made," said the critics. German director Wolfgang Petersen's 1981 filming of the novel by Lothar-Günther Buchheim is set in the faithful replica of a World War II German submarine. The film was Petersen's breakthrough to Hollywood and was nominated for six Oscars, a Golden Globe and a BAFTA award.
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The Tin Drum
The 1959 novel earned Günter Grass the Nobel Prize for Literature. In 1979 came the film adaptation, starring the 13-year-old actor David Bennent as Oscar Matzerath, the boy who at age three decides to stop growing. Director Völker Schlöndorff's film was the first German production to take the Oscar for best foreign language film.
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Look Who's Back
Timur Vermes' 2012 debut novel, Look Who's Back, was a smash hit in Germany. His satire featured a character Germans tend not to take lightly: Adolf Hitler. The dictator wakes up in a park in Berlin in this millennium — and everyone believes he is an actor. David Wnendt adapted the book into a movie in 2016.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Constantin Film Verleih GmbH
In Times of Fading Light
The movie In Times of Fading Light was released in 2017, six years after Eugen Ruge's novel tracing the life of a family in East Germany hit the bookstores. Another example of a well-done adaptation of literature, director Matti Geschonneck's satirical movie explores the last days of the East German regime with humor and tragic depth.
Image: X-Verleih/H. Hubach
The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum
In 1975, two years before leftist Red Army Faction insurgents started making headlines in Germany with kidnappings and murders, Volker Schlöndorff adapted Heinrich Böll's novel The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum for the screen. The novel gives a detailed description of the social atmosphere in West Germany at the time. Schlöndorff cut right to the chase and hit the mark.
A best-selling book turned into a successful film: that's the exception rather than the rule, in particular if the book touches on a difficult topic. Bernhard Schlink's novel The Reader looks at the repercussions of the Nazi era in Germany, and how the country deals with its past. Stephen Daldry's 2008 adaptation was a strong film also thanks to the superb actors, Kate Winslet and David Kross.
Image: Studio Babelsberg AG
All Quiet on the Western Front
This film from the early days of sound movies is an excellent example of an arresting movie adaptation of a literary work. US director Lewis Milestone brought the horrors of WWI to the screen in 1930, based on Erich Maria Remarque's novel All Quiet on the Western Front. The Nazis made sure the movie was rarely shown in Germany.
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Death in Venice
In 1971, Italian director Luchino Visconti surprised the world with his film adaptation of German author Thomas Mann's 1912 novella, Death in Venice. Visconti's movie is very close to the narrative tone of the original. The film starring Dirk Bogarde is ponderous, melancholy — and stunningly beautiful.