Katja Lange-Müller

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Katja Lange-Müller (born February 13, 1951 in Berlin-Lichtenberg) is a German writer living in Berlin. Her works include several short stories and novellas, radio dramas, and dramatic works, which have received wide critical acclaim.

The daughter of Inge Lange, an East German party functionary, Katja Lange-Müller was expelled from school at the age of 17 for "unsocialist" behavior. From an early age, she and her circle of friends were carefully watched by the Stasi. Prevented from attending college, she first learned to be a typesetter, and later worked as a nurse in a psychiatric clinic. At the age of 28, she was accepted to the "Johannes R. Becher" Literature Institute in Leipzig, marking the beginning of her career as a writer.

[edit] Works

  • Wehleid – wie im Leben, Frankfurt am Main 1986
  • Kasper Mauser – die Feigheit vorm Freund, Köln 1988
  • Verfrühte Tierliebe, Köln 1995
  • Bahnhof Berlin, München 1997 (ed.)
  • Die Letzten, Köln 2000
  • Biotopische Zustände, Berlin 2001
  • Preußens letzte Pioniere, Rheinsberg 2001
  • Stille Post, Schwetzingen 2001 (with Hans Scheib)
  • Vom Fisch bespuckt, Köln 2002 (ed.)
  • Der süße Käfer und der saure Käfer, Berlin 2002 (zusammen mit Ingrid Jörg)
  • Was weiß die Katze vom Sonntag?, Berlin 2002 (with Jonas Maron and Monika Maron)
  • Die Enten, die Frauen und die Wahrheit, Köln 2003
  • Der nicaraguanische Hund, Berlin 2003
  • o.ä., München 2003 (with Traute Langner-Geißler)

[edit] Awards

  • Ingeborg-Bachmann-Preis, 1986
  • Alfred-Döblin-Preis, 1995
  • Berlin Literature Prize, 1996
  • Preis der Bestenliste des Südwestrundfunks, 2001
  • Stadtschreiber-Literaturpreis of the city Mainz and the television station ZDF, 2002
  • Roswitha-Preis of the city Bad Gandersheim, 2002
In other languages