Angela Litschev

Angela Litschev
Born July 17, 1978
Sofia, Bulgaria
Nationality German
Occupation Writer and poet
Years active 2000–present
Website
Angela Litschev in: NRW Literatur im Netz (German)

Angela Litschev (also known as Angela Litschewa, Bulgarian Ангела Личева; born July 17, 1978 in Sofia) is a Bulgarian-born German writer and poet.[1]

Life and career

Angela Litschev was born 1978 in Sofia as the only daughter of Alexander Litschev, a historian and philosophy lecturer and his wife Anna, a sociologist. The family emigrated to Germany in 1990, after her father had received a teaching position at the University of Düsseldorf. She attended Annette von Droste-Hülshoff-High School in Düsseldorf and then studied at St. Ursula's College of Social Work.

Litschev started her career by publishing her poems in poetry magazines and anthologies, including two volumes of the Young Poetry Series Junge Lyrik in the Martin Werhand Verlag in the years 2000 and 2003. The published poems were recited as part of a reading series by various authors in various German cities like Bonn, Cologne or Essen, among others in 2000 with a reading at the University of Cologne.[2] Other poems were published in the Journal of Poetry, essays and criticism DAS GEDICHT, in the years 2003, 2007 and 2009.

In 2003 she received the Unicum prize for the best sonnet.[3] In 2004, she published her debut collection of poems, eine rote minute,[4] for which she received the Award of the Förderpreis für Literatur der Landeshauptstadt Düsseldorf in 2005.[5] This ceremony brought her awareness beyond the borders of North Rhine-Westphalia and a reading in the Bulgarian Cultural Institute in Berlin in 2007.[6] The year before, she had already published her second volume of poetry, rausch und täuschung. Several of her poems from this collection were translated into Croatian for the magazine Riječi, with an introduction by Ludwig Bauer.[7]

In 2006 the Bremer Straßenbahn AG under the direction of Dr. Joachim Tuz started a visual lyrical project called Poetry In Motion (Poesie bewegt) with many modern authors and their contemporary poems, Angela Litschev among them.[8]

In addition to readings, she reviews works by colleagues from the Düsseldorf area or supports Bulgarian writer colleagues. In 2009 she was involved in the translation of new Bulgarian poetry for the German literary magazine Akzente.[9]

Awards

Publications (selection)

Books

Anthologies (selection)

External links

References