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Frankfurter Buchmesse© Goethe-Institut / Illustration: Tobias Schrank

Cherrypicker 2024

The literature blog “Cherrypicker” presents selected novels and non-fiction, graphic novels and stories, audio books and literature for children and teenagers. And it gathers concise voices from the world of literature. Every week a new recommendation, every week the chance to discover remarkable texts, images and opinions.

A collage of several illustrations from the book "Ready America" by Anna Haifisch. The illustrations include a jumping seal, comic figures and adverts. © Anna Haifisch/Rotopol

Cherrypicker | Literature
Californian Stew

Melancholic, comic, humorous: In “Ready America”, Anna Haifisch portrays a land of contrasts. Billboards meet lonely dogs, palm trees encounter comic figures. A picture book full of references and original juxtapositions.

Young people posing in the Eisenheim colliery housing estate in Oberhausen, 1970s, two boys, three girls, aged 12 to 16 Photo (detail): © mauritius images / Werner Otto

Cherrypicker | Literature
Behind unspoken words

How much can a friendship endure when society threatens to tear it apart, when the inequalities seem more important than everything we have experienced together? A novel that gets under your skin with its probing questions.

Snow White at the MagicCon 2018 in Bonn Foto (Detail): © picture alliance / Geisler-Fotopress | Christoph Hardt/Geisler-Fotopress

Five German fairy tales
And they lived happily ever after

Once upon a time – there was an ancient text form that can be found in all cultures. These fantastic stories were so important that they were even recognised as intangible cultural heritage in Germany in 2016. About five German fairy tales that still live on our bookshelves today.

Man with electrodes on his head © mauritius images / Yulia Koltyrina / Alamy / Alamy Stock Photos

Cherrypicker | Literature
Is the truth worth five million?

In Ursula Poznanski's new thriller, 100 people fight against a lie detector and for five million euros in prize money. The condition: Always tell the truth.

Fields in the Hallertau (May 2022) mauritius images / Brigitte Deus-Neumann

Cherrypicker | Literature
Invitation to take a deep breath

Taking a break from life and exploring it anew - Stephan Schäfer's novel does just that. He tells the story of two strangers who become friends. In doing so, he speaks not only to himself, but to us all.

Sasa Stanisic reads from ‘If the widow wants to be addressed, she places the watering can on the grave with the spout facing forwards’ at lit.Cologne 2024, 11 June 2024 © picture alliance / Geisler-Fotopress | Kai Schulz/Geisler-Fotopress

Cherrypicker | Literature
Log in to life

A hot summer day. Four young people are sitting in the vineyards, somewhat bored. Suddenly, one of them has a life-changing idea. Saša Stanišić turned it into an entire collection of stories.

A stork's nest on a Trabi, Neuruppin, Brandenburg, 2004 © picture alliance / Caro | Bastian

Cherrypicker | Literature
The ossification of the East

After German reunification, many people believed that East German society would soon become more like West German society. For Steffen Mau, one thing is clear: that was an illusion - East Germany will remain different.

Martina Hefter, winner of the German Book Prize 2024, before the award ceremony at the Römer in Frankfurt Photo (detail): © picture alliance/dpa | Andreas Arnold

German Book Prize 2024
Martina Hefter wins the German Book Prize

There was a festive atmosphere in the Kaisersaal of Frankfurt's Römer when the six finalists were presented. The tension grew until it was finally announced that Martina Hefter would receive the German Book Prize 2024.

Sandy path through dune grass with Sylt apple roses from Weststrand to Hörnum, Sylt © picture alliance / imageBROKER | Hans-Werner Rodrian

Interview with Teresa Ciuffoletti
The whole world is one village

Teresa Ciuffoletti has translated works by Judith Hermann, Dörte Hansen and Fatma Aydemir into Italian. In this interview, she explains why she doesn't use translation tools, what North Friesland and Tuscany have in common and which book she would like to translate one day.

Well-attended courtyard at the exhibition centre in Frankfurt am Main during the book fair Photo (detail): © picture alliance / dts-Agentur

Frankfurt Book Fair 2024
Defying the reports of losses

Less is not more here: a profound structural change in the publishing sector is becoming apparent ahead of the 2024 Frankfurt Book Fair. Some outstanding new publications also deal with the current crises in society.

Mirrianne Mahn at the 49th Federal Delegates' Conference of the Bündnis 90/Die Grünen party on 24 November 2023 © picture alliance / dts-Agentur

Cherrypicker | Literature
On searching and finding family roots

With her debut novel, Mirrianne Mahn realises her desire to write a story about strong women in Cameroon and Germany. The result is a work of art of immense power that reaches back to the German colonial era in Cameroon.

Luisa Neubauer at the Fridays for Future climate demo on 15 September 2023 in Berlin © mauritius images / Dominik Butzmann/photothek.de / imageBROKER

Cherrypicker | Literature
If numbers could speak

A book that explains the climate crisis in pictures, without a lot of text and a jumble of figures? Together with journalist Christian Endt and graphic designer Ole Häntzschel, activist Luisa Neubauer has achieved just that. They present facts about the climate crisis in 80 information graphics - presented in an easy-to-understand manner.

„Hasenprosa“ von Maren Kames © Shutterstock, Cover: Suhrkamp

Cherrypicker | Literature
Like a scare bullet

In her third book, nominated for the German Book Prize 2024, Maren Kames eloquently guides her audience into the proverbial “rabbit hole” of her mind and tells her family story along the way.

Nolte: Die Frau mit den vier Armen © Suhrkamp Nova / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Three dead bodies in Hanover

Rita Aitzinger's very first appearance: detective inspector – in Hanover of all places. She swears, loves motorsport and has to solve a series of murders of young men. Jakob Nolte, theatre and novelist, presents his first crime thriller: funny, sad, full of allusions.

Book covers of the nominated titles © S. Fischer, Suhrkamp, Rowohlt, Klett-Cotta, C.H. Beck

Cherrypicker | Literature
The glorious six

The shortlist for this year's German Book Prize is out! It has now been decided which six authors can hope to win the prestigious and lucrative prize with their latest novels.

Bedside drawer with book (Enzensberger: Schlafen) © Hanser Berlin / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Sleepless through the night

Theresia Enzensberger lies awake all night involuntarily. So she reflects on the unique physical phenomenon called sleep, which leaves us vulnerable and weak – and without which we are incapable of any performance.

Kiosk "Heiße Ecke", book cover: Schulze: Zu Gast im Westen © Holger Moos / Wallstein

Cherrypicker | Literature
On the road in the Ruhr area

Ingo Schulze spent six months exploring the Ruhr area. Not only did he discover many new things there, but also some things that connect this part of the West with the East.

Woman with cloth bag (Book cover: Kaspar: Echte Camper) © Tyrolia / Canva

Cherrypicker
Bad, worse, camping

Camping holiday? It's a horror trip for Benni. Only when his parents accept his fears and anger does it become a great holiday adventure for him.

Books covers © Reprodukt, Edition Moderne, avant-verlag, Helvetiq / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Excellent comic books

New graphic novels demonstrate the diversity of the genre. Anke Feuchtenberger's magnum opus was honoured as literature, Sandra Rummler looks back on East Berlin and the post-reunification period. And the two Swiss authors Nando von Arb and Tobias Aeschbacher were awarded for works that could not be more different.

Children on scooters in front of a wall (book cover: Weber: Bannmeilen) © Matthes & Seitz / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
On a foray through the suburbs

Anne Weber has lived in Paris for decades, but hardly knows the suburbs on her own doorstep. For her new book, she has therefore embarked on an unusual journey of discovery.

Rocko Schamoni: "Des Pudels Kern" © Buchcover: hanserblau, Pudel Club: Change22, CC BY-SA 3.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

Cherrypicker
The Essence Of It All

"Rural punk" Rocko Schamoni delivers the second part of his autobiography in his familiar anecdotal style, in which he gains a foothold in the Hamburg music scene, tries his hand as a rock star and eventually becomes co-founder of the Pudel Club, a beacon of Hamburg's nightlife.

Wittstock: Marseille 1940 © C.H. Beck / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
With the manuscript across the Pyrenees

When the Wehrmacht invaded France in May 1940, some of Germany's best-known artists were forced to flee for a second time in exile. The writer and journalist Uwe Wittstock tells the story of their fates in a sensitive and gripping way.

House wall with book cover: Ani: Lichtjahre im Dunkel © Suhrkamp / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
A missing person

The setting for Friedrich Ani’s latest novel may be Munich, but this is not the Munich of the rich and beautiful. A murder case is also unravelled, though not solved.

Hirschl: Content © Zsolnay / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Forever in the listicles labyrinth

Algorithms, AI, clicks and likes – everyday life in any office. Especially when content is produced endlessly. Elias Hirschl imagines such a content farm. His digital dystopia is so grotesquely funny that you almost overlook the abysses.

Annas: Berlin, Siegesallee © Rowohlt / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
The Kaiser must die!

In the summer of 1914, four people meet in Berlin who couldn’t be more different but have one thing in common: They cherish liberty and despise colonialism.

The Olympic Square in front of the east side of the Olympic Stadium, 2024. Photo (detail): Toniklemm, CC BY-SA 4.0 © Toniklemm, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Book covers: Insel, Rowohlt, Hanser, Korrektur, Piper, Carlsen

Cherrypicker | Literature
And the ball rolls forever

The European Football Championship has just kicked off in Germany. Just in time, we present a small, well-rounded selection of football books – including painted goals and literary texts.

Kosiak and Hochstuhl (with book cover) © Johann Jaritz / CC BY-SA 4.0 / Book cover: Suhrkamp

Cherrypicker | Literature
Brutal idyll

In her explosive debut novel, Austrian author Julia Jost describes growing up in 1990s Carinthia, a place caught between its Nazi past and right-wing populist present.

Dobler: Ein Sohn von zwei Müttern © Tropen / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Between mama and mother

For a long time, Franz Dobler didn’t want to write a book about his life as an adoptee. Fortunately for readers, he changed his mind.

Loreleyblick Maria Ruh bei Urbar (with book cover) © Jörg Braukmann, CC BY-SA 4.0 / Book cover: Rowohlt

Cherrypicker | Literature
Motel Loreley

Andreas Stichmann was born in Bonn and has seen plenty of water flow down the Rhine. His stories tell of people who live by the river, exploring their desires and yearnings – and the way they deal with reality.
 

Barbi Marković „Minihorror“ © Cover: Residenz-Verlag, City: Shutterstock

Cherrypicker | Literature
The Everyday Horror Show

Barbi Marković presents a multi-layered episodic novel in which she mixes everyday events with elements of the fantastic. The result: educational horror stories – and the award of the Leipzig Book Fair 2024.

Hartmann: Klarkommen © park x ullstein / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Finding their feet

Ilona Hartmann presents an anti-novel for young adults that breaks with the illusion that the years of our youth have to be just wonderful from start to finish. As a counterpoint, the author portrays the mind-numbing mediocrity of the daily lives of three young people who move to the big city.

Stermann: Mir geht's gut, wenn nicht heute, dann morgen © Rowohlt / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Breakfasting with Erika

They first they met on his talk show, then regularly at Vienna’s Hotel Imperial: Dirk Stermann, cult cabaret artist, and Erika Freemann, psychoanalyst. At the age of twelve, Freeman had fled from the Nazis to New York. Now she speaks with Stermann about her life in a way that is ever witty, touching, and quite entertaining.

Kehlmann: Lichtspiel © Rowohlt / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Light with many, many shadows

In Daniel Kehlmann’s latest novel, Georg Wilhelm Pabst, one of the most famous directors of the Weimar Republic, sells his soul to the Nazis, albeit with comical contortions.

Schreiber: Endling © Eichborn / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Endings and endlings

Jasmin Schreiber’s third novel takes us on a road trip set against a backdrop of loss, species extinction and political reprisals in the year 2041. Not to mention plenty of flora and fauna.

Olga Hohmann „In deinem rechten Auge wohnt der Teufel“ © Texas A&M University-Commerce Marketing Communications Photography, CC BY 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

Cherrypicker | Literature
Ten points for passion

Olga Hohmann's meandering puzzle of literary miniatures tells stories from the everyday life of its protagonist, of failure, of sideways and forward movements and the sublimity of opera.

Schrocke: Weiße Tränen © Mixtvision / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
So much everyday racism

In her evocative young adult novel, Kathrin Schrocke writes about pervasive racism, white privilege and the typical adolescent thought processes of a 16-year-old.

Kant: book covers © Reclam, C.H. Beck, Propyläen, Wallstein, Wienand / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Kant is by no means rigid!

300 years ago, on 22 April 1724, Immanuel Kant was born. In this anniversary year, he is being honoured, celebrated and critically examined as an important philosopher and pioneer of the Enlightenment. Here is a small selection of current books about him.

Žeželj: Wie ein Hund © avant-verlag / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Wild Kafka mix

In a spectacularly designed graphic novel, the Croatian artist Danijel Žeželj tackles several Franz Kafka novels at once.
 

Grinnell, Iowa / book cover: Sargnagel: Iowa © Aaron Tait, CC BY 2.0 / Rowohlt

Cherrypicker | Literature
Horny Hangovers in the USA

In her new book, Stefanie Sargnagel reports on a stay in the USA, accompanied by singer Christiane Rösinger.

Bajohr: (Berlin, Miami) © Rohstoff / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Does AI dream of electric books?

Artificial intelligence (AI) is here to stay, and we will have to learn to live with this omnipresent technology. Hannes Bajohr has conducted a bold experiment in narrative literature by getting an AI language model to write a novel.

Lewinsky: Rauch und Schall © Diogenes / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Goethe gets writer’s block

Anyone tired of the cult of Goethe’s genius should read Charles Lewinsky’s satirical novel in which the great poet and writer is plagued by all-too-human problems.

Mahler: Komplett Kafka © Suhrkamp / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Kafka’s Failed Money-Making Scheme

On the hundredth anniversary of his death, Franz Kafka’s life and work are being celebrated and illuminated. In his new graphic novel, illustrator Nicolas Mahler gives them a colourful brilliance – although it’s almost all black-and-white.
 

Klüssendorf: Risse © Piper / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Beyond Repair

In her new book, Angelika Klüssendorf revisits the painful childhood and youth of the girl from her novel trilogy.
 

Book covers © Tulipan, Jacoby & Stuart, Beltz & Gelberg, Loewe, dtv / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Skaters, Oracles and Martians

The latest young adult novels deal with big questions about friendship, true greatness, life and death. They also offer science fiction and fantasy.

Funke: Die Farbe der Rache © Dressler / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
For which there are no words

16 years after the final novel in the Inkheart series was published, the author and illustrator Cornelia Funke has embarked on another foray into the world of Meggie, Dustfinger and co. And created a captivating sequel in which the written word is no longer the focus.

Book covers © Beltz & Gelberg, Thienemann, Arena, Oetinger, Mixtvision, Leykam

Cherrypicker | Literature
Hypersonic speed and chain stitches

Realistic yet fantastical, full of adventure, exciting and informative: all of these attributes apply to our small selection of new children’s books.

Mall: Ein Hund kam in die Küche © Leykam / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
A Wartime Childhood

In his new novel, Sepp Mall tells the story of a South Tyrolean family during the Second World War from the both innocent and harrowing perspective of a child.

Billboard with book covers © Atlantis, Beltz & Gelberg, Hanser, Jungbrunnen, Kraus /Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Topsy-turvy worlds

The stories told in picture books these days are fantastical, full of adventures and fun. Animals drive construction vehicles and are puzzled by humans, while grown-ups are taught a lesson by children – and the Moon orders itself a dress.

Construction fence with audio book covers © Argon, Hörbuch Hamburg, Diwan, Osterwold, Hörverlag, cc-live / Canva

Cherrypicker | Literature
Get in the listening habit

If you’re not in the mood for reading, why not try taking pleasure in listening? More recent audiobooks deal with special family relationships and the magic of music.

Haas: Eigentum © Hanser / Canva

Cherrypicker
Home at last

In his new novel, Wolf Haas tells of a mother’s tragicomic life and sends his regards to the afterlife.

Book covers: Öziri: Vatermal / Utlu: Vaters Meer © Claasen, Suhrkamp / Canva

Cherrypicker
A reckoning or rapprochement

Coming to terms with absent fathers is the central theme of the novels by Necati Öziri and Deniz Utlu. One gives rise to anger, the other to melancholy.

Sila: Radio Sarajevo © Hanser Berlin / Canva

Cherrypicker
Childhood Under Fire

The Bosnian War: unsettling, brutal, forgotten by many today. Tijan Sila brings it back to life in his memoir. Years of violence, anger and grief lie between the siege of his native Sarajevo and his family’s flight to Germany.
 

Edelbauer: Die Inkommensurablen © Klett-Cotta / Canva

Cherrypicker
Sitting on the powder keg

A farmhand, a mathematics students and a young aristocrat are teetering through war-drunk Vienna. A plot line spanning just 24 glittering hours in August 1914 is all that Raphaela Edelbauer needs to portray a country on the brink of an abyss that threatens to devour not only the young.

Rabe: Die Möglichkeit von Glück © Klett-Cotta (Cover), Matthias Süßen, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons (Hintergrund)

Cherrypicker
All this violence

Anne Rabe’s remarkable family novel impressively traces a history of violence in (East) Germany. It stretches from the Nazi era to the present day.

Biller: Mama Odessa © Kiepenheuer & Witsch / Canva

Cherrypicker
Love Too Late

With his new novel, Maxim Biller has created a touching literary memorial to his mother.

İnan: Natürlich kann man hier nicht leben © Piper / Canva

Cherrypicker
The revolution and its children

Özge İnan has written a debut novel that is extremely well worth reading. It is about Turkey in the 1980s, the difficult decision to emigrate and the omnipresence of politics.

Handel / Suchanek: Spiegelstadt. Tränen aus Gold und Silber © Knaur / Canva

Cherrypicker
Magic, Intrigue and Tears

Christian Handel and Andreas Suchanek take us along on a frenzied tour of two Berlins – one magical and one modern. But no matter where you are, devious intrigues lurk on both sides of the mirror.

Koplin: Die Guten und die Toten © Suhrkamp / Canva

Cherrypicker
Crime scene Berlin

Drugs, guns, murders in a multistorey car park: there’s plenty going on in Kim Koplin’s debut crime novel. We are taken on a hectic trip through Berlin, where somebody is always on the run. And in amongst it all we have a detective with problems at home and a night watchman with a daughter and a past.

Railroad station of Gittersee in Saxony, cover of the book "Gittersee" by Charlotte Gneuß © S. Fischer Verlag (Cover), Echtner, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons (Background)

Cherrypicker
Strong anti-hero

Charlotte Gneuss’s everyday drama set in East Germany is surprising for its oppressive intensity and extraordinary, ordinary protagonist.

Mevissen: Mutters Stimmbruch © Verlag Klaus Wagenbach /Canva

Cherrypicker
Narrated female spaces and bodies

Katharina Mevissen tells an entirely unusual mother’s story.

Wacker: Die Spur der Aale © Kiepenheuer & Witsch / Canva

Cherrypicker
Fishing in Troubled Waters

A Frankfurt customs investigator finds an eel head on his doorstep. The next day, he doesn’t survive his fishing trip. The police say it was an accident. The public prosecutor thinks otherwise.

Strunk: Der gelbe Elefant © Rowohlt / Canva

Cherrypicker
Anti-Heroes Everywhere

Hardly any other author writes as bluntly about the misery of the everyday as Heinz Strunk. His new collection of stories is no exception.

Baumeister: oh cupid © avant-verlag /Canva

Cherrypicker
Love in the Age of Dating Apps

In her graphic novel debut, Helena Baumeister tells of her experiences with an online date.

Ohl: Wespen © Matthes & Seitz / Canva

Cherrypicker
The wonderful world of wasps

The moment they come near us, we swat them away. We regard them as the scourge of summer – yet they have almost only benefits to offer. Michael Ohl on wasps and the invaluable role they play in our ecosystem.

Schuh: Ein Mann ohne Beschwerden © Zsolnay /Canva

Cherrypicker
Brilliant complainer

The Austrian author Franz Schuh has written a new collection of essays in which the interest in death is mutual.
 

Frank Goosen: Spiel ab! © Kiepenheuer & Witsch / Canva

Cherrypicker
The Wonderful World of Popular Sport

Frank Goosen and Thomas Brussig write about what is supposedly the world’s most wonderful pastime. No, not sex; it’s more complicated.

John Boyne: Cyril Avery Photo (Detail): © Goethe-Institut / Svenja Schindler

Cherrypicker
Our Editors’ Favourite Books

Book Lovers Day is celebrated every year on 9 August. It is meant to encourage people to find their favourite reading nook, a good book, and spend the day immersed reading. Our editorial team presents some of their personal favourites for inspiration for new reading material.

Martin Suter: Melody © Diogenes / Canva

Cherrypicker
A matter of interpretation

Martin Suter’s latest novel has everything a good book needs – making it the perfect read for the summer holidays. This tale of a woman who disappears just before her wedding can be quickly devoured in a deckchair by the sea or in a hammock in the garden.

Stuckrad-Barre: Noch wach? © Kiepenheuer & Witsch / Canva

Cherrypicker
Utmost Attention

The publication of Benjamin von Stuckrad-Barre’s new novel was a major event for the feuilletonists. What will remain after the excitement has died down? A lot of unanswered questions and, one hopes, a lot of attention for an important social topic.

Birnbacher: Wovon wir leben © Zsolnay / Canva

Cherrypicker
Staying power

Julia suffers from asthma. And she has just lost her job. Back in the village where she grew up, she is struggling to make a fresh start. But that’s not possible without confronting the demands and expectations of her family and the drab reality of village life. When Julia meets the “guy from the city”, a glimmer of hope emerges amid all the hopelessness.
 

Schwartz: Vita Obscura – Life Bizarre © avant-verlag / Canva

Cherrypicker
Bizarre Life Stories

On just one book page, comic artist Simon Schwartz presents his whimsical and varied historical vignettes.

Bärfuss: Die Krume Brot © Rowohlt

Cherrypicker
Inherited Misfortune

In his new novel, Lukas Bärfuss again focuses on the existential hardships of people in modern, capitalist society. Here he tells of the fate of a single mother.

Golden Cosmos / Schneider: Ludwig und das Nashorn © NordSüd Verlag

Cherrypicker
Wittgenstein's Rhino

Recent picture books tell stories about animals that can be the best of friends. And how imagination opens our eyes to the invisible.

Schoch: Das Liebespaar des Jahrhunderts © dtv / Canva

Cherrypicker
The Slow Dissolution of a Great Love

They are three words, each of which means a beginning and an end: I love you. I’m leaving you. But what lies in between? In the case of the first-person narrator in Julia Schoch’s new novel, a 30-year relationship. First elation, celebration, then everyday life, children, betrayal, anger. 

New Children's Books (June 2023) © Beltz & Gelberg, Klett Kinderbuch, Kibitz, Mairisch, Hanser, dtv / Canva

Cherrypicker
Gripping, quirky, moving

New children’s books tell gripping, quirky stories, but also address serious subjects, such as pandemics and war.

 

Büsing: Koller © Steidl / Canva

Cherrypicker
A Detour to the Sea

In her second novel, Annika Büsing takes us on a fast-paced journey. To Leipzig, the flooded Ahr valley, a town on the Baltic Sea – a short trip turns into a road trip.

New Young Adult Fiction 2023 © Beltz & Gelberg, Hanser, Carlsen, Thienemann / canva

Cherrypicker
Much Ado About Diversity

The post-reunification period, upheavals, queerness, ethics, and morality: new books for young people offer a wide range of topics

Flašar: Oben Erde, unten Himmel © Verlag Klaus Wagenbach

Cherrypicker
Through death to life

In Milena Michiko Flašar‘s new novel, a disorientated young woman finds not only an unusual new job, but also a substitute family.

Spring 2023 Audiobooks © Der Hörverlag, tacheles!, Der Audio Verlag, Argon / canva

Cherrypicker
Springtime Listening

When it’s beginning to look like spring, it’s time to get out of the house. That doesn’t mean you have to put down your books, though. Audiobooks are ideal for walks and outings, whether read by well-known authors or accomplished audiobook narrators, whether the subject matter is dark or light.

“Wahre Liebe mit Loriot” (True Love with Loriot), Diogenes Verlag Cover © Diogenes Verlag, Photo: Marcus Sporkmann

Cherrypicker
An Ode to the Schwanzhund

Vicco von Bülow, also known as Loriot, would have turned 100 on 12 November 2023. To celebrate the great humourist and artist, the booklet “Wahre Liebe mit Loriot” (True Love with Loriot) has been published by Diogenes Verlag and we are collecting your favourite Loriot moments.
 

Hirsch: Die Dinge © Kein & Aber / Canva

Cherrypicker
Of women and their objects

The lives of women in the past are often presented as trivial. Annabelle Hirsch contradicts this theory. In a compassionate account, she guides readers through the many facets of women’s history, based on 100 objects.
 

Setz: Monde vor der Landung © Suhrkamp / Canva

Austrain Book Prize 2023
A Tragic Contrarian

In Clemens J. Setz’s new novel, the main character believes that people do not live on, but inside the earth.

Buchcover: Falschgeld © Hoffmann und Campe / Canva

Cherrypicker
A Small-Town Youth

Matthias Matschke’s debut novel is ostensibly about growing up in a small West German town in the 1980s. But much more so, it tells the more universal story of what it’s like to search for one’s own place in the world.

Book cover: Stockhausen © Carlsen

Cherrypicker
Karlheinz Superstar

In a graphic novel, the composer and pioneer of electronic music Karlheinz Stockhausen seems like a being from another world to a small-town boy.

Book cover: Die Frau mit dem Arm © Galiani Berlin

Cherrypicker
Hypnosis and other crackpot ideas

Sven Regener and Andreas Dorau have written a second book about the life of the one-time New German Wave star. It demonstrates that it’s not just success that’s fun.

Book cover: Einsteins Hirn © Zsolnay

Cherrypicker
Jellied Brains

Where exactly does genius reside? In Franzobel’s latest novel, an American pathologist asks that question – and steals the brain of the recently deceased Albert Einstein to find out.

Book cover: Berlin baut © Hatje Cantz

Cherrypicker
Berlin construction site

The young graphic designer Leander Zerwer has created a somewhat different Berlin architectural guide for the years between 1946 and 2022.

Book cover: Der Sandkasten © Luchterhand

Cherrypicker
Life is a game

In his new novel, Christoph Peters dares to play games – with literature, current political events, his own creative process and readers.

Book cover: Europa – wo bist du? © dtv

Cherrypicker
Travelling Europe One Railway at a Time

Interrail pass, backpack, laptop, notepad: Alex Rühle travelled light on his tour of Europe. But he asked some weighty questions: What is the European Union today? Do its early values still apply? Rühle collected all sorts of answers while crossing its borders – and tens of thousands of kilometres.

Book cover: Das Herz der Zwerge (Teil 1) © Knaur

Cherrypicker
Blacksmiths, warriors – and heroes

Markus Heitz impressively demonstrates what fantasy can do - create a visually-stunning world that feels both familiar and strange and a story with surprising yet logical twists that is never dull.

Book cover: Was zur Hölle?! © Kibitz

Cherrypicker
Hell of a job

My job is hell! – that's probably what everyone has thought at one time or another. In a comic book by Patrick Wirbeleit, a pubescent actually finds work in the realm of the devil.

Book cover: Vaters Kiste © Rowohlt

Cherrypicker
Unpleasant Remains

The only thing Lukas Bärfuss inherited from his father is a banana crate with unknown contents. Using his own family history, he reflects on inherited injustice in general and on how it could be eliminated.

Book cover: Zur See © Penguin

Cherrypicker
No One is an Island

Dörte Hansen’s new novel is a farewell to the everyday life of the native population of a small island in the North Sea. If we take a closer look, though, slivers of hope glow from among the dark waves again and again.

Book covers © Berenberg, HarperCollins, C.H. Beck, Molden

Cherrypicker
Twelve months of crisis

Our times are marked by crisis. Looking back a hundred years, we realise 1923 was no better.

Book cover: Völlig meschugge?! © Carlsen

Cherrypicker
A Shlimazel in the Mishpocha

Andreas Steinhöfel and Melanie Garanin have produced a moving and humorous graphic novel from a TV series about anti-Semitism and racism at school.

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