Katja Lange-Müller: 'Drehtür'

Drehtür Cover ©Kiwi-Verlag

Tue, 25.10.2016

6:30 PM

Goethe-Institut Glasgow

Revolving Door
 
After 22 years of working for international aid organizations, 65-year-old Asta finds herself stranded in the Munich airport. Pushed out of her most recent job in a health clinic in Nicaragua by her colleagues, she’s standing by the revolving door, smoking. She didn’t really want to come back but because her mistakes on the job were starting to pile up, she was handed a one-way ticket. And now she doesn’t know what’s next. She’s only reasonably happy when she’s needed. And who could possibly need her, decommissioned nurse that she is?
 
Asta observes her surroundings and takes stock of her life, remembering the people she once knew and the adventures she had. With each cigarette, Asta delves deeper into her past – and, with each episode, the narrator presents another variation on an extremely current and existential topic: helping and its risks.
 
Katja Lange-Müller, born in East Berlin in 1951, is a freelance writer and lives in Berlin. She has received numerous awards, among them the Ingeborg Bachmann Prize in 1968 and the Alfred Döblin Prize for her novella Verfrühte Tierliebe.

 

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