Explore about the Famous Writer Sibylle Lewitscharoff, who was born in Germany on April 16, 1954. Analyze Sibylle Lewitscharoff’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Sibylle Lewitscharoff dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Sibylle Lewitscharoff?
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Sibylle Lewitscharoff Biography
Sibylle Lewitscharoff (born 16 April 1954) is a German author. Among her novels are Pong (1998), Apostoloff (2009) and Blumenberg (2011). She has received several German literary awards, including the Georg Büchner Prize in 2013.
In 1998, she published her first novel Pong The novel is named after its main character; a man who has been interpreted by reviewers as possibly being insane, and possibly not being fully human. He has his name for his ability to bounce like a ball; something that is connected to his birth from one big tear. He is obsessed with human perfection, especially that of women, and is portrayed as a misogynist. He finds a woman called Evmarie whom he eventually marries. He puts her on a roof top to hold her hands over two eggs which ultimately will become a boy and a girl and soon get their own offspring. The book ends with Pong’s joyous cry as he is committing suicide through jumping from the roof. The book was praised for its playful language and earned Lewitscharoff the Ingeborg Bachmann Prize
After obtaining a degree in religious studies at the Free University of Berlin she lived in Buenos Aires and Paris before returning to Berlin where she worked as a book-keeper. She ended that work in 2000.
Published in 2006, the novel Consummatus has its title from the last words of Jesus on the cross according to the Gospel of John, consummatum est (it is completed). The main character is German teacher Ralph Zimmermann and the book follows his inner monologue as he sits alone one Saturday in a Stuttgart café drinking vodka and coffee. His thoughts circle much around death; both of his parents in an accident, of his girlfriend Johanna (Joey), as well as pop icons such as Andy Warhol, Jim Morrison and Edie Sedgwick.
Her 2009 novel Apostoloff has a partly self-biographical theme and features two sisters who go to Bulgaria to bury their Bulgarian immigrant father who has committed suicide through hanging himself. Their chauffeur Ruben Apostoloff tries to make them enthusiastic about the nature and culture of Bulgaria. The book earned Lewitscharoff the Leipzig Book Fair Prize and the Marie Luise Kaschnitz Prize.
Lewitscharoff has received praise for her playful mastery of language, described by the jury of the Berlin Literature Prize in 2010 as “uncommonly dense and original prose works … that oppose all classifications with their own peculiar amalgam of humor and profundity. … Lewitscharoff’s poetic gesture is a brilliant recitative, a virtuoso rhetoric”. In 2011, she was described in Die Welt as “the most dazzling stylist of contemporary German literature.”
The novel Blumenberg was published in 2011 and features the philosopher Hans Blumenberg who in the novel one evening finds a lion at his desk; and the book subsequently focuses on Blumberg’s thoughts on lions in philosophy, history and theology. Lines are drawn to Hieronymus, Marc, Thomas Mann and other historical figures relationship to the lion. The appearance of the lion makes Blumenberg feel selected. The novel also tells about four of Blumenberg’s students.
In 2013 she received the Georg Büchner Prize for “[re-exploring] the boundaries of what we consider our daily reality with an inexhaustible energy of observation, narrative fantasy and linguistic inventiveness”.
On 2 March 2014, Lewitscharoff held the traditional Dresdner Reden (Dresden Speech) in Dresden Staatsschauspiel. In the speech “Von der Machbarkeit. Die wissenschaftliche Bestimmung über Geburt und Tod” she criticized what she considered medical mechanization of reproduction and death. She voiced opposition to artificial insemination and surrogacy referring to the offspring through such methods as “twilight creatures”, “half human, half artificial I-don’t-know-whats”. The speech caused discussion and criticism. Lewitscharoff later said she regretted a couple of phrases, but that her main points stood.
In 2014, she published her first crime novel, Killmousky. The novel is named after a black cat that one evening arrives at the home of Richard Ellwanger, a retired police officer who names the cat after a similar cat in Midsomer Murders. The police officer has retired after he used violence against a suspect in a kidnapping case in order to get information to find the kidnapped. He goes on to take a position as private detective for a person in New York’s upper class who wants a possible murder solved. The book received mostly mixed reviews.
What's Sibylle Lewitscharoff Net Worth 2024
Net Worth (2024) | $1 Million (Approx.) |
Net Worth (2023) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2022) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2021) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2020) | Under Review |
Sibylle Lewitscharoff Family
Father's Name | Not Available |
Mother's Name | Not Available |
Siblings | Not Available |
Spouse | Not Available |
Childrens | Not Available |