Martin Kluger (author, 1948)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Martin Kluger (born January 9, 1948 in Berlin ; died April 28, 2021 there ) was a German writer and screenwriter .

Life

A Charité building, the setting in the novel Die Gehilfin .

Martin Kluger studied English and linguistics in Oberlin (Ohio) , Tübingen and Berlin , was a lecturer at the TU Berlin and worked as a copywriter and literary translator . He has translated works by Malcolm Lowry , Iris Murdoch , John Fowles and Donald Barthelme into German, among others . His best-known scripts include the scripts for Felidae (together with Akif Pirinçci , the author of the novel) and Rama dama (together withJoseph Vilsmaier , the director of the film). Kluger also wrote a number of radio plays .

As a novelist, Kluger received a lot of attention with his work Absent Animals , which comprised more than a thousand pages, but above all with the historical novel The Assistant . The assistant links Berlin's social history with the history of medical science about the Charité . The novel, which features not only fictional people but also the physicians and researchers Rudolf Virchow , Robert Koch , Paul Ehrlich and Emil von Behring , received great critical acclaim and was on the "longlist" for the German Book Prize in 2006 , as well as two years later his novel The bird that went for a walk , for which he was awarded the literature prize of the city of Bremen in 2009. In 2008 Kluger received the Candide Prize together with Mathias Énard .

Martin Kluger lived in Berlin and Montevideo . He died unexpectedly in April 2021 at the age of 73 in Berlin.

Works

Novels

Scripts (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Richard Kämmerlings : With the whole joke of desperation , welt.de, accessed on April 30, 2021.
  2. Review notes on Die Gehilfin bei perlentaucher.de
  3. Jo Lendle : He found refuge from the world in the zoo , faz.net, accessed on April 30, 2021.