Uwe Johnson (1934–1984)
Author of Anniversaries: From a Year in the Life of Gesine Cresspahl
About the Author
One critic summed up Uwe Johnson's vision of Germany this way: "Contemporary Germany is Johnson's all-purpose, modern symbol of confused human motives, social forces that drive people frantic, and frustrations in communication that finally choke men into silence" (Webster Schott, N.Y. Times). The show more Third Book about Achim (1961), winner of the $10,000 International Publishers' Prize in 1962, is a novel about divided Germany. It addresses one of the crucial philosophical problems of life: What is objective truth? Is there such a thing at all? Joachim Remak, in Harper's, says, "It is an easy book to dislike at first [but] in the course of the novel all the annoying traits suddenly vanish or become unimportant. For this is a great book; literary award judges can be right." The novel was a catharsis for Johnson's own personal conflicts: he had reluctantly left his home in East Germany in 1959 in order to have his first novel published without censorship. This first novel, Speculations about Jacob (1959), was praised for a style that defies the traditional structure of the novel and indeed of language. In his Anniversaries (1970--73), Johnson again treats pressing moral and political issues by having the scene of the novel switch from New York City during the Vietnam War to Mecklenburg, Germany, in the Nazi period. One of the major themes of the book is the failure of liberalism in the United States in the 1960s and in Germany in the 1930s. Johnson's work is consistent, never pedestrian, and sometimes brilliant. In 1971 Johnson received the Buchner Prize. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Works by Uwe Johnson
Anniversaries, Volume 2: From a Year in the Life of Gesine Cresspahl, April 1968–August 1968 (2021) 20 copies, 1 review
Kleines Adreßbuch für Jerichow und New York. Ein Register zu Uwe Johnsons Roman 'Jahrestage'. Angelegt mit Namen,… (1983) — Author — 16 copies
»fuer Zwecke der brutalen Verstaendigung«: Hans Magnus Enzensberger - Uwe Johnson. Der Briefwechsel (2009) — Author — 4 copies
Du 610: Max Frisch 1911-1991 1 copy
Dos opiniones 1 copy
Jahrestage - Aus dem Leben von Gesine Cresspahl (in 4 Bänden) & Kleines Adreßbuch für Jerichow und New… (1970) 1 copy
Christmas, 1967 1 copy
I giorni e gli anni 1 copy
Associated Works
Als de dagen van het jaar verhalen uit de Westduitse werkelijkheid 1970-heden (1985) — Author — 3 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Johnson, Uwe
- Legal name
- Johnson, Uwe
- Birthdate
- 1934-07-20
- Date of death
- 1984-03-12
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- Germany
- Birthplace
- Cammin in Pommern, Westpommern, Polen
- Place of death
- Sheerness, Kent, England
- Places of residence
- Cammin, Germany (birth)
Sheerness, Kent, England (death) - Education
- University of Rostock
University of Leipzig - Occupations
- novelist
essayist - Organizations
- Gruppe 47
- Awards and honors
- Georg Büchner Preis (1971)
Thomas-Mann-Preis (1978)
Members
Discussions
2022 Group Read of Anniversaries by Uwe Johnson in 1001 Books to read before you die (December 2022)
Reviews
Lists
Schwob Nederland (1)
Five star books (1)
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 63
- Also by
- 7
- Members
- 1,449
- Popularity
- #17,737
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 18
- ISBNs
- 140
- Languages
- 7
- Favorited
- 8
Uwe Johnson, German Author, Johnson was born in Kammin in Pomerania (now Kamień Pomorski, Poland). His father was a peasant of Swedish descent from Mecklenburg and his mother was from Pomerania. In 1945 the family fled to Anklam in West Pomerania and in 1946 his father died in a Soviet internment camp. Due to his failure to show support for the Communist regime of East Germany, he was suspended from the university on 17 June 1953, but he was later reinstated. He came to the US in 1961. I think I read some where that he lived at the address that he gave Gesine.
Book original title is Jahrestage. Aus dem Leben von Gesine Cresspahl, 2018 translation by Damion Searls.
The book is written as a diary with a submission for every day of the year from August 1967 to 1968 which includes a leap year, also has a prelude and an appendix. The book does not remind you of a diary but more of a journal and free floating with some confusion as to who is actually talking but it has to all be Gesine because it is her diary. Gesine was born about the time of Hitler coming to power. She endured the war, the soviet occupation, communism and getting herself to the US, finding work, raising her daughter as a single mother. The actual time period finds them in the use for 6 years and the daughter is 10 and Gesine has decided to tell the story of her own childhood and coming of age. So the book is a coming of age story of a German girl and also a historical novel encompassing the past but also the present including; the Vietnam war, Che Guevara, racial violence, elections and assassinations. It also covers the Prague Spring;a period of political liberalization and mass protest in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic. It began on 5 January 1968, when reformist Alexander Dubček was elected First Secretary of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ).
Liked: it wasn't hard to read but it also was not compelling. The decision to read a section every day helped to keep me reading and ultimately finish. It was a panoramic view of history.
Disliked: it was often confusing and hard to know who was speaking, even though it had to be Gesine. And the point was often lost or unclear. Perhaps because it was history through Gesine's eyes and the NYT it was unreliable? It also has or shares a lot of details with the author's life.
Rating 3.4 stars… (more)