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Uwe Tellkamp

    October 28, 1968

    Uwe Tellkamp is a German writer whose work offers a profound exploration of life's complexities in East Germany. His prose is characterized by deep insights into the human psyche and societal conditions, often focusing on themes of identity, memory, and resistance against authority. Tellkamp's style is known for its precision and evocative atmosphere, drawing readers into meticulously crafted worlds. His writing stands as an important literary legacy for understanding recent German history and its impacts.

    Kulata
    Die Carus-Sachen
    Reise zur blauen Stadt
    La Tour : Histoire en provenance d'une terre engloutie
    The tower
    The tower : tales from a lost country
    • 2014

      The tower : tales from a lost country

      • 1024 pages
      • 36 hours of reading
      3.1(11)Add rating

      In derelict Dresden a cultivated, middle-class family does all it can to cope amid the Communist downfall. This striking tapestry of the East German experience is told through the tangled lives of a soldier, surgeon, nurse and publisher. With evocative detail, Uwe Tellkamp masterfully reveals the myriad perspectives of the time as people battled for individuality, retreated to nostalgia, chose to conform, or toed the perilous line between East and West. Poetic, heartfelt and dramatic, The Tower vividly resurrects the sights, scents and sensations of life in the GDR as it hurtled towards 9 November 1989. Uwe Tellkamp was born in 1968 in Dresden. After completing his military service, he lost his place to study medicine on the grounds of 'political sabotage'. He was arrested in 1989, but went on to study medicine in Liepzig, Dresden and New York, later becoming a surgeon. He has won numerous regional prizes for poetry, as well as the Ingeborg Bachmann Prize for The Sleep in the Clocks. In 2008, he won the German Book Prize for The Tower.

      The tower : tales from a lost country
    • 2014

      In derelict Dresden a cultivated, middle-class family does all it can to cope amid the Communist downfall. This striking tapestry of the East German experience is told through the tangled lives of a soldier, surgeon, nurse and publisher. With evocative detail, Uwe Tellkamp masterfully reveals the myriad perspectives of the time as people battled for individuality, retreated to nostalgia, chose to conform, or toed the perilous line between East and West. Poetic, heartfelt and dramatic, The Tower vividly resurrects the sights, scents and sensations of life in the GDR as it hurtled towards 9 November 1989. Uwe Tellkamp was born in 1968 in Dresden. After completing his military service, he lost his place to study medicine on the grounds of 'political sabotage'. He was arrested in 1989, but went on to study medicine in Liepzig, Dresden and New York, later becoming a surgeon. He has won numerous regional prizes for poetry, as well as the Ingeborg Bachmann Prize for The Sleep in the Clocks. In 2008, he won the German Book Prize for The Tower.

      The tower