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Hans Christoph Buch [ Germany ]

Biography

© Hartwig Klappert
© Hartwig Klappert

Gast des ilb 2009, 2008, 2003.

Bibliography

Die Hochzeit von Port-au-Prince
Suhrkamp
Frankfurt/Main, 1984

Die neue Weltunordnung
Suhrkamp
Frankfurt/Main, 1996

Blut im Schuh
Eichborn
Frankfurt/Main, 2001

Kain und Abel in Afrika
Volk & Welt
Berlin, 2001

Wie Karl May Adolf Hitler traf und andere wahre Geschichten
Eichborn
Frankfurt/Main, 2003

Standort Bananenrepublik
Klampe
Springe, 2004

Black Box Afrika
Klampe
Springe, 2006

Tod in Habana
FVA
Frankfurt/Main, 2007

Das rollende R der Revolution
Klampe
Springe, 2008

Sansibar Blues. oder:
Wie ich Livingstone fand
Eichborn
Frankfurt/Main, 2008

Hans Christoph Buch was born in Wetzlar, in 1944. He grew up in Wiesbaden, Marseilles and Copenhagen. After giving a reading to Group 47 when he was nineteen, he was given a grant to attend the Literary Colloquium in Berlin. He studied German language and literature and Slavonic at the Free and Technical Universities and in 1972 received his PhD, supervised by Walter Höllerer. He went on to work as a reader for the publisher Rowohlt and became co-founder and editor of their magazine »Literaturmagazin«. Buch taught at the Universities of Bremen and Essen in the seventies, and was a guest professor in California, New York and Texas. He traveled to West Africa and South America to give lectures and readings.

As novelist, essayist and reporter, Buch fuses literature and politics. Short story collections (1966) and literary essays (1972) were followed by the first novel, »Die Hochzeit von Port-au-Prince« (1984; »The Wedding at Port-au-Prince«, 1986), the first volume of his »Haiti Trilogy«. Here, first-hand, detailed descriptions and references to literary and cultural history complement one another. The biographies of Buch’s grandfather, who migrated to and married a native, and other migrants present a full portrait of a Caribbean island afflicted by violence and dictatorship.

In the nineteen-nineties Buch worked as a war correspondent, mainly in Africa, for several newspapers including »Die Zeit« and »Die Welt«. Collections of his reportages, on certain hotspots and war zones, as well as travelogues reveal Buch to be a sharp and harsh observer who chooses to highlight ambivalences and grievances rather than participate in the »social romantic glorification of the Third World«, as he put it in his novel »Kain und Abel in Afrika« (2001; t: Cain and Abel in Africa).

In his novel »Tod in Habana« (2007; t: Death in Havana) the downfall of the death-driven protagonist is an allusion to Thomas Mann’s »Death in Venice« and an analogy for the city’s physical and moral decline and the country’s disastrous political situation. Most recently, with »Das rollende R der Revolution« (2008; t: The rolling R of revolution), the author gives us a glimpse, at once subjective and sophisticated, into the social and political structures of certain Latin American countries. Buch’s most rcent novel »Sansibar Blues oder: Wie ich Livingstone fand« (2008; t: Zanzibar blues or: how I found Livingstone) sheds light on the history of colonial ties between the Indian Ocean island and Germany.

© international literature festival berlin

[http://www.hans-christoph-buch.de/]

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