display

Vienna (AP) - The German writer and lyric poet Ludwig Fels is dead. He died on Monday at the age of 74 in his adopted home Vienna, as announced by his publishing house Jung und Jung.

Born in Treuchtlingen in Middle Franconia, Fels wrote novels and poetry as well as plays and radio plays.

He was known for his powerful visual style and his great immediacy.

His most recent work, “Moon Quake”, which was published in 2020, was on the long list for the Austrian Book Prize.

After finishing school in Bavaria, he began an apprenticeship as a painter, which he quickly broke off.

He then worked as a laborer in various industries until he got into writing.

His experiences in the precariat and the anger against exploitation remained major themes in his work.

In 1973 he published his first volume of poetry, «Anlaufen», followed by a volume of prose and other collections of poetry.

In 1975 the first novel "The Sins of Poverty" came out on the market.

The novel "An Absurdity of Love" (1981) was made into a film by ZDF.

In "Heaven Was a Great Presence" he dealt with his mother's cancer death.

"Even his early books are characterized by a clear everyday language, which is often interspersed with aggressive vocabulary," writes the Berlin International Literature Festival about him.

His characters often live on the fringes of society, and love often appears as a deceptive lifeline.

Recently his language seemed to have become a little milder and smaller, less violent language and fine emotions could also be read.

display

Fels lived in his adopted home Vienna since the 1980s.

For his often polarizing works, he received the City of Nuremberg Culture Prize, the Wolfgang Koeppen Prize, the Wolfram von Eschenbach Prize and the Johann Alexander Döderlein Culture Prize, among others.

Notice of death from the publisher

biography