Annette Riemer

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Annette Riemer (born April 11, 1988 in Halle (Saale) ) is a German literary scholar , journalist and writer .

Life

Riemer studied literature and history at the Martin Luther University Halle , the University of Leipzig and the Lucian Blaga University in Sibiu . During her studies she worked in Leipzig to research the work of Joachim Wilhelm von Brawe . In Sibiu, Riemer published his first volumes of short stories with Schiller Verlag. Here she made the acquaintance of the writers Paul Jeute and Bernhard Spring . The latter referred Riemer to the chief's own hearth , where Riemer's first contributions appeared in 2012. In the following years Riemer established herself as a columnist and wrote for the New Germany , the Mitteldeutsche Zeitung and the Magdeburger Volksstimme , among others . For years she has also published in the left-wing newspaper Junge Welt and can also be found in the satirical Eulenspiegel .

For her narrative work, Riemer was awarded a prize in 2014 by the Landesheimatbund Sachsen-Anhalt e. V. awarded a special prize.

Personal

Riemer lives in Quedlinburg and Halle. Bernhard Spring dedicated the novel Vorstadtengel (2017) to her.

Publications (selection)

Volumes of stories

  • Gentle trench warfare Schiller Verlag. Sibiu 2009.
  • Through the divided Bukovina. Eastern European travel images. Schiller publishing house. Sibiu 2011.
  • So beautiful! As a Transylvanian in Berlin. Everyday stories and abysses. Schiller publishing house. Sibiu 2016.

Narratives (selection)

  • That was Liebermann In: Junge Welt, 2./3. June 2012.
  • Why always you (And not me)? In: Ingeborg von Lips (Ed.): Hallesche Anthologie. University Press Halle-Wittenberg. Hall 2012.
  • On this one Thursday In: Junge Welt, March 2, 2013.
  • Until (s) the Last Supper In: Das Blättchen , No. 26, 2014.
  • Kaufland-Romance In: Junge Welt, October 22, 2016.
  • Refugee helper Schlademann In: Junge Welt, December 17, 2016

literature

  • Wiglaf Droste : Annette Riemer. In: Chief's own hearth. Issue 51, July 2012.
  • Joseph Wälzholz: Gustav Seibt is thirsty for Saxony-Anhalt. In: Die Welt, March 1, 2014.
  • Bernhard Spring: The literary home child. In: Mitteldeutsche Zeitung, November 4, 2014.

Individual evidence

  1. [1]
  2. See for example: Endangered Species. Scenes from the East [on the desolation of East Germany], in: Junge Welt, April 21, 2018.