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Awards
OverviewWinner of the German Book Prize, from the winner of the 2023 Georg Büchner Prize. It is 1989, and a young literature student named Ed travels to the Baltic island of Hiddensee, a notorious destination for hippies, idealists, and those at odds with the East German state. On Hiddensee, Ed joins the community of seasonal workers, led by the charismatic, enigmatic Kruso. At night, they secretly help the refugees who have come to the island seeking passage to the West. But Kruso is preoccupied by another kind of freedom — freedom of the mind. As the wave of history washes over the German Democratic Republic, the friends’ grip on reality loosens and life on the island will never be the same. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Lutz Seiler , Tess LewisPublisher: Scribe Publications Imprint: Scribe Publications Dimensions: Width: 12.90cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 19.80cm ISBN: 9781911344414ISBN 10: 1911344412 Pages: 480 Publication Date: 10 January 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews`The poetic language and careful expression to the prose in Kruso make for an arresting read too, slightly odd and off-beat, but quite compelling. It's also a novel of big themes - freedom (personal and political), longing (in all its gradations), and mourning, in particular - and the narrative's general sense of drift, with these bobbling up constantly but never overwhelming the story, is particularly well done. A fine, big novel.' -- M.A. Orthofer * The Complete Review * `If communism's final moments are an island of time, Kruso is a bottled message washed up from those distant shores. A strange journey, Seiler's novel subscribes to island rules, with historicity suspended above and between fevered dreams of perfect community and beguiling freedom.' -- Letitia Montgomery-Rodgers * Foreword Reviews * `Lutz Seiler's writings trace their roots to Uwe Johnson's poetry and reflect the German past, present and future beyond the surface of simple truths [...] In Kruso, Lutz Seiler visualises the hopes and constraints of a whole country by means of one singular place, Hiddensee, during one short period of time, June to November 1989.' * from the statement of the Uwe-Johnson-Prize 2014 jury * `A multi-layered philosophical novel that poses a major question to us and to our time: How is freedom possible?' * Die Zeit * `Seiler's novel is lyrical and powerful in its eloquence. Already he is to be counted among the great contemporary German literary figures.' * WDR 5 * `This novel has historical-philosophical dimensions: it is a significant contemplation on different forms of freedom as well as a wonderfully poetic exaltation of a concrete historical event - a truly great book.' * 3sat Kulturzeit * `That rare treasure - a great novel.' * Potsdamer Neueste Nachrichten * `A sublime book that is far more than just the novel of the year.' * Deutschlandradio Kultur * `A special book that will endure.' * Frankfurter Rundschau * `Seiler's novel Kruso shows what German literature can accomplish when it's fully worked.' * Welt am Sonntag * `Seiler delivers a debut novel with which he manages to catapult himself into the front rank of this country's authors.' * Die Zeit * `Kruso [is] the first worthy successor to Thomas Mann's Magic Mountain to appear in contemporary German literature.' * Der Spiegel * `This novel set in the historic summer of 1989 is a lighthouse, not an ivory tower.' * Suddeutsche Zeitung * `An outstanding debut novel ... Beautifully phrased and paced, Tess Lewis's translation delights on every page as she conveys the contagious sense of liberation that blows through Mr Seiler's mesmeric novel.' * The Economist * `A seamless English translation by Tess Lewis ... Readers might doubt whether Robinson Crusoe can work in a German setting - they might even feel affronted that it's been attempted - but Seiler's novel springs from his own experience in a way that underlines the universality of the tale.' -- Maggie Fergusson * Newsweek * `The German poet Lutz Seiler has brought all his art, linguistic ease, flair for dazzling images and mastery of what he describes as the nervous systems of memory to this extraordinary debut novel ... Kruso is an exciting, expansive work of German literature; it may well prove one of the major novels of the 21st century.' -- Eileen Battersby * The Irish Times * `If communism's final moments are an island of time, Kruso is a bottled message washed up from those distant shores. A strange journey, Seiler's novel subscribes to island rules, with historicity suspended above and between fevered dreams of perfect community and beguiling freedom.' -- Letitia Montgomery-Rodgers * Foreword Reviews * `Lutz Seiler's writings trace their roots to Uwe Johnson's poetry and reflect the German past, present and future beyond the surface of simple truths [...] In Kruso, Lutz Seiler visualises the hopes and constraints of a whole country by means of one singular place, Hiddensee, during one short period of time, June to November 1989.' * from the statement of the Uwe-Johnson-Prize 2014 jury * `A multi-layered philosophical novel that poses a major question to us and to our time: How is freedom possible?' * Die Zeit * `Seiler's novel is lyrical and powerful in its eloquence. Already he is to be counted among the great contemporary German literary figures.' * WDR 5 * `This novel has historical-philosophical dimensions: it is a significant contemplation on different forms of freedom as well as a wonderfully poetic exaltation of a concrete historical event - a truly great book.' * 3sat Kulturzeit * `That rare treasure - a great novel.' * Potsdamer Neueste Nachrichten * `A sublime book that is far more than just the novel of the year.' * Deutschlandradio Kultur * `A special book that will endure.' * Frankfurter Rundschau * `Seiler's novel Kruso shows what German literature can accomplish when it's fully worked.' * Welt am Sonntag * `Seiler delivers a debut novel with which he manages to catapult himself into the front rank of this country's authors.' * Die Zeit * `Kruso [is] the first worthy successor to Thomas Mann's Magic Mountain to appear in contemporary German literature.' * Der Spiegel * `This novel set in the historic summer of 1989 is a lighthouse, not an ivory tower.' * Suddeutsche Zeitung * `An outstanding debut novel ... Beautifully phrased and paced, Tess Lewis's translation delights on every page as she conveys the contagious sense of liberation that blows through Mr Seiler's mesmeric novel.' * The Economist * `A seamless English translation by Tess Lewis ... Readers might doubt whether Robinson Crusoe can work in a German setting - they might even feel affronted that it's been attempted - but Seiler's novel springs from his own experience in a way that underlines the universality of the tale.' -- Maggie Ferguson * Newsweek * `The German poet Lutz Seiler has brought all his art, linguistic ease, flair for dazzling images and master of what he describes as 'the nervous systems of memory' to this extraordinary debut novel ... Kruso is an exciting, expansive work of German literature; it may well prove one of the major novels of the 21st century.' -- Eileen Battersby * The Irish Times * `If communism's final moments are an island of time, Kruso is a bottled message washed up from those distant shores. A strange journey, Seiler's novel subscribes to island rules, with historicity suspended above and between fevered dreams of perfect community and beguiling freedom.' -- Letitia Montgomery-Rodgers * Foreword Reviews * `An outstanding debut novel ... Beautifully phrased and paced, Tess Lewis's translation delights on every page as she conveys the contagious sense of liberation that blows through Mr Seiler's mesmeric novel.' * The Economist * `A seamless English translation by Tess Lewis ... Readers might doubt whether Robinson Crusoe can work in a German setting - they might even feel affronted that it's been attempted - but Seiler's novel springs from his own experience in a way that underlines the universality of the tale.' -- Maggie Ferguson * Newsweek * `Lutz Seiler's writings trace their roots to Uwe Johnson's poetry and reflect the German past, present and future beyond the surface of simple truths [...] In Kruso, Lutz Seiler visualises the hopes and constraints of a whole country by means of one singular place, Hiddensee, during one short period of time, June to November 1989.' * from the statement of the Uwe-Johnson-Prize 2014 jury * `A multi-layered philosophical novel that poses a major question to us and to our time: How is freedom possible?' * Die Zeit * `Seiler's novel is lyrical and powerful in its eloquence. Already he is to be counted among the great contemporary German literary figures.' * WDR 5 * `This novel has historical-philosophical dimensions: it is a significant contemplation on different forms of freedom as well as a wonderfully poetic exaltation of a concrete historical event - a truly great book.' * 3sat Kulturzeit * `That rare treasure - a great novel.' * Potsdamer Neueste Nachrichten * `A sublime book that is far more than just the novel of the year.' * Deutschlandradio Kultur * `A special book that will endure.' * Frankfurter Rundschau * `Seiler's novel Kruso shows what German literature can accomplish when it's fully worked.' * Welt am Sonntag * `Seiler delivers a debut novel with which he manages to catapult himself into the front rank of this country's authors.' * Die Zeit * `This novel set in the historic summer of 1989 is a lighthouse, not an ivory tower.' * Suddeutsche Zeitung * `Kruso [is] the first worthy successor to Thomas Mann's Magic Mountain to appear in contemporary German literature.' * Der Spiegel * `The German poet Lutz Seiler has brought all his art, linguistic ease, flair for dazzling images and master of what he describes as 'the nervous systems of memory' to this extraordinary debut novel ... Kruso is an exciting, expansive work of German literature; it may well prove one of the major novels of the 21st century.' -- Eileen Battersby * The Irish Times * Author InformationLutz Seiler was born in 1963 in Gera, Thuringia, and today lives in Wilhelmshorst near Berlin and Stockholm. Since 1997, he has been the literary director and custodian of the Peter Huchel Museum. His many prizes include the Ingeborg Bachmann Prize, the Bremen Prize for Literature, the Fontane Prize, the Uwe Johnson Literary Prize 2014, and the German Book Prize 2014. Tess Lewis is a writer and translator from French and German. Her translations include works by Peter Handke, Anselm Kiefer, and Philippe Jaccottet. She has won a number of awards including the 2015 ACFNY Translation Prize and a Guggenheim Fellowship. She is an Advisory Editor for The Hudson Review. www.tesslewis.org Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |