Olga Grjasnowa
Unbiased Diagnosis of our Times
Olga Grjasnowa weaves complex political issues into her remarkable plots. Her analytical eye and refreshingly distinctive style enthuse readers and critics alike.
AT A GLANCE
Olga Grjasnowa was born in 1984 to a Russian Jewish family in Baku, Azerbaijan. In 1996 her family emigrated and settled in Hesse as “quota refugees”, where she learned German at the age of 11. In 2010 she graduated with a BA in Creative Writing from the Deutsches Literaturinstitut Leipzig. After studying abroad in Poland, Russia (at the Maxim Gorky Literature Institute), and Israel, Grjasnowa took up dance studies at the Freie Universität Berlin. Grjasnowa is married to Ayham Majid Agha, a Syrian-born actor, with whom she has a daughter.Her critically acclaimed debut novel Der Russe ist einer, der Birken liebt (All Russians Love Birch Trees) won the Klaus-Michael Kühne Prize and the Anna Seghers Prize in 2012. Her next novel, Die juristische Unschärfe einer Ehe (The Legal Haziness of a Marriage) written on a grant from the Berlin Senate, came out in 2014 and won the Chamisso Prize. Her first two books have both been adapted for the stage. Her latest, Gott ist nicht schüchtern (City of Jasemine) came out in 2017.
Headstrong bicultural protagonists
Grjasnowa is acclaimed for her sharp, analytical eye and refreshingly idiosyncratic style. In 2012 she won the Anna Seghers Prize and was nominated for the German Book Prize. In her first novel, All Russians Love Birch Trees, Olga Grjasnowa portrays an autonomous, determined, even driven young woman. Her second novel, The Legal Haziness of a Marriage, features similarly headstrong characters who are continually reinventing themselves. What they have in common is their relative indifference to such constraining categories of identity as native country, culture and religion. This independent streak also means a readiness to strike camp and move on whenever things are liable to get too intense, too serious, too confrontational.The settings for All Russians Love Birch Trees – whose protagonist is born in Baku and grows up in Hesse as a Jewish "quota refugee" – partly overlap with the author’s itinerary, and yet the story is by no means autobiographical. A conscientious observer, Olga Grjasnowa wants to get to know precisely what she is writing about. Consequently, what most excited her during her studies at the Deutsche Literaturinstitut in Leipzig, which she completed in 2010, were mainly the research workshops. The theory that Olga Grjasnowa was missing in Leipzig she acquired during study terms at the Maxim Gorki Literary Institute in Moscow and from a “Scenic Writing” course at the Universität der Künste in Berlin. For the novel’s flashbacks to the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh in the Caucasus, she researched extensively on location and interviewed locals. Her object, says Grjasnowa, is to enable us to comprehend "how ethnically motivated violence works, how pogroms can be set in motion within a matter of weeks – and not only there."