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      • Literaturverlag Droschl GmbH

        Droschl is publishing international authors like Lydia Davis, Oksana Sabuschko, Georgi Gospodinov or Julien Gracq as well as German writing authors like Iris Hanika, Ilma Rakusa, Thomas Stangl, Monique Schwitter, Thomas Jonigk or Werner Schwab. The names speak for themselves, they stand for an attitude that does not consider literature as representation but as protest and comment from the fringe. We want to address the reader’s curiosity, those who want to discover something, who focus on words, whose one great love is language, many languages, the innumerable manners of speech.

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      • DropCap Rights Agency

        DropCap Rights Agency represents U.S.- and U.K.-based book publishers in marketing and selling the translation  rights to their titles. We are a team of passionate professionals with decades of experience in the fields of book publishing, translation rights, and publishing technology. We love introducing our publishers’ books to new markets around the world and pride ourselves in representing titles we truly believe in. We have sold book rights in over 180 different languages and in more than 120 countries.

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      • Losing Skin

        Novella

        by Regina Dürig

        A special recommendation of the editors of New Books in German: Over the last few years, the once niche genre of the verse novel has gained exponentially in popularity, from the success of Max Porter’s Grief is the Thing with Feathers and Sarah Crossan’s One to Robin Robertson’s Booker win with The Long Take. Regina Dürig’s Losing Skin is a valuable addition to this growing genre, exploring themes closely connected with the Everyday Sexism and #metoo movements.  Each chapter in Losing Skin dips into a different scene from the life of a woman growing up in the present day, with the book spanning her life from the ages of four to thirty-eight. The reader never discovers the woman’s name; the book is narrated in the second person and she is only ever »you«. In the early chapters of the book, »you« manipulate or are manipulated by your parents, who want you to play with a child you do not know, to eat things you do not like and hold you responsible for things that are not your fault. As a teenager, you are often embarrassed – for example when your mother suggests you show your father your new bra. When a boy jokingly tips you into a dustbin at school you are mortified, but think that perhaps you deserve it: you once corrected his love-letters and sent them back to him. The humiliations are familiar and uncomfortable. A doctor’s suggestion, when you are fourteen, that you join a sports team to learn to »withstand a little pain« anticipates the darker events that are to come. As you grow older, you find yourself in situations where men repeatedly sideline or take advantage of you. Your boss tells you that women cannot write about football; a male colleague is questioned by friends about a topic on which you are the expert. There is unwanted sex with a friend’s friend, a rape in your parents’ holiday villa and an implied gang rape on the way home from a friend’s birthday party; these events seem avoidable, yet nonetheless outwith your control. They are accompanied by more subtle unkindnesses. In the final climactic scene, in a discussion between friends about sex and consent, a girlfriend points at each woman in turn, asking whether they have ever been raped. Nobody admits it, not even »you« and the reader cannot help but feel let down. Despite the sometimes harrowing subject matter, this is a deeply satisfying read, told with great economy of language. At a time when casual violence against women and minorities is very much in the news, Losing Ground is a necessary contribution to a timely debate.

      • February 2021

        Heaven is a Small Circle

        Novel

        by Carolina Schutti

        This novel by Carolina Schutti broaches different concepts of freedom and identity. Two separate plot lines outline the fate of two women. At first glance, these women could not be more different but little by little, certain parallels reveal themselves.The first-person narrator, a young woman, is losing control over her life, her feelings, her language and her body. At the same time, however, her perceptions remain crystal clear. Now she is expected to learn to manage her temper at an asylum. While Mark, the only person she is attached to there, is about to be discharged, she is repeatedly thinking about her own departure.Ina, the second protagonist, has already departed – to Siberia, where she would like to run a roadside inn at an ice road. However, she finds herself facing a tough adventure with obscure Boris and only notices too late that she is caught in a trap. The story gets more thrilling with every chapter. In Schutti’s poetic and yet powerful style, both women’s lives come together.

      • February 2023

        Ocean Breeze

        Novel

        by Carolina Schutti

        Two daughters grow up without fathers; the mother of the two is overburdened by life. She tops up the social money with the sale of second-hand clothes. Everything could be better and lighter … With lies and clever manipulation, the mother tries to shield her children from the outside world and at the same time binds them to herself. Hand in hand, she walks through the village with her two little princesses, although they are actually »disrespectful little monsters« who sometimes fight their way through everyday life in a beastly manner. The girls’ creepy, fairy-tale isolation begins to crack as the older of the two discovers the power of curiosity and begins to suspect that the world has more in store for her than just this small, painstakingly patched-together life.

      • June 2021

        And nothing ever ends

        Novel

        by Tomer, Gardi

        In And Nothing Ever Ends, two artists from two different centuries travel through linguistic and cultural spaces. Experiences of foreignness, identity, life as an artist, and lots of politics are the major themes of the novel, in which the two storylines mirror each other. First, Tomer Gardi, written in German, sends himself as a literary character with the talking German shepherd Rex and the elf king or even Goethe’s Erlkönig at his side on a fantastic-adventurous odyssey, slapstick, funny and with many subliminal pinpricks. In the second part of the novel, translated from Hebrew, we follow the 19th century Indonesian painter Raden Saleh from Java through Europe and back to Asia—a historical novel and at the same time a reflection of our times.

      • June 2020

        Echoes Chambers

        Novel

        by Iris Hanika

        Iris Hanika was awarded the Leipzig Book Fair Prize 2021 for her novel Echoes Chambers. The jury's statement:»Iris Hanika proves to be a clever, witty and wild narrator. As one of the most headstrong voices in contemporary German literature, who can look at social conditions with a brutally clear and unabashed view. And then again incredibly funny.« In Echoes Chambers, Iris Hanika impressively demonstrates her skills as artful, ingenious storyteller. We are travelling to New York to accompany the poet Sophonisbe. She follows an invitation to come to the »City of Dreams« for ten weeks before returning to Berlin, where Roxana, the novel’s second protagonist and a successful writer of self-help books, takes over. The two women get caught up in various incidents, excesses and digressions, including with a young bourgeois who gives the story another sharp twist. Nevertheless, this book does not just speak of mature delusional love – it is also about Echo and Narcissus. The intricately woven episodes are brimming with a boisterous thirst for knowledge, a good dose of life’s reality and merciless criticism of capitalism. Echoes Chambers, a travel as well as a romance novel, but also an action novel and self-help book, provides for great literary joy.

      • February 2019

        Ghost Story

        Novel

        by Laura Freudenthaler

        What if a void suddenly opened up in your life? This is the question Laura Freudenthaler pursues in her second novel Ghost Story. In her gap year, that she meant to spend playing piano and writing textbooks, Anne is thrown off track. One by one she abandons her habits and hobbies. By day she roams the streets, by night she writes her observations into a notebook. Her flat, where she has been living with Thomas for 20 years, feels increasingly uncomfortable, not least because Thomas seems to be less and less present there. She had suspected all along that he might be cheating on her. And now the girl, as Anne calls his mistress, appears as fleeting, whispering ghost. There are noises and apparitions now which are getting harder and harder for Anne to identify. In this story of jealousy and passion almost resembling a musical score we follow Anne deeper and deeper into a world of mirror images and false bottoms where the lines between reality and delusion are slowly blurring.

      • Die Philosophie der Zweite zu sein

        Ein anderweitiger Weg der Lebensphilosophie

        by Master Hsing Yun

        Das Werk beschreibt das Leben des Hochehrwürdigen Meister Hsing Yun, seine Gedanken über den Buddhismus und wie diese Religion sein Leben bestimmt hat.Mit zwölf Jahren Novize in einem chinesischen Kloster, studierte er dort die buddhistische Lehre. Jahre später gründete er eine Sonntagsschule mit dem Ziel, das Dharma zu verbreiten. Mit der Schule legte er den Grundstein für seine späteren Bemühungen, den Buddhismus den Menschen in China, später sogar weltweit, nahe zu bringen. Der Hochehrwürdige Meister gründete mehr als 200 Tempel, er ordinierte über 1000 Mönche und Nonnen, und kümmerte sich um Kinder, Waisen und Arme.In China trug er dazu bei, dass die Gesellschaft den Buddhismus trotz Modernisierungs- und Globalisierungstendenzen besser verstehen lernte.

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