Charles Dickens, Tatjana Hauptmann (Ill.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Tomi Ungerer, Tomi Ungerer (Ill.)
Donna Leon
Donna Leon
Donna Leon
Tomi Ungerer, Tomi Ungerer (Ill.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Donna Leon
Erich Hackl
Hugo Loetscher
Tomi Ungerer, Daniel Kampa (Hg.), Tomi Ungerer (Ill.)
Donna Leon
Astrid Rosenfeld
Tatjana Hauptmann, Tatjana Hauptmann (Ill.)
Liaty Pisani
Friedrich Dürrenmatt
Lukas Hartmann, Tatjana Hauptmann, Tatjana Hauptmann (Ill.)
Doris Dörrie
Martin Suter
Martin Suter
Erich Hackl
Slawomir Mrozek
Slawomir Mrozek
Petros Markaris
Lukas Hartmann
Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman
Erich Hackl
Peter Urban (Hg.)
Petros Markaris
Claus-Ulrich Bielefeld, Bielefeld & Hartlieb, Petra Hartlieb
Erich Hackl
Friedrich Dürrenmatt
Andrzej Szczypiorski
Tel Aviv in the year 2024: Israel is reduced to a heavily secured city state, a narrow strip of land by the sea. Those able to leave have left. Bram Mannheim has stayed and is looking after his ill father. Twenty years ago Bram, who grew up in Amsterdam, was a well-known university teacher in Princeton. When Bennie, his four- year-old son, vanished into thin air, his life collapsed; and with it Bram’s marriage, his career, and his self-confidence. In Tel Aviv he runs a support service helping parents track down their disappeared children. Then a new series of suicide bombings shock the small country. And Bram discovers that an atrocious secret lurks behind the attacks which at the same time, however, gives him hope that Bennie may still be alive. A serious subject matter, brilliantly and poignantly told. ›The Right to Return‹ is sold to: Turbine (Denmark) Seuil (France) Marcos y Marcos (Italy) Gesharim (Russia) Euromedia (Czech Republic)
»He can tell a story like hardly any other writer in Western Europe.«Literaturen
»A depiction of Israel’s near future. By a novelist with a panoramic view!«Trouw
»A novel, broad in scope and audacious, which does not confine itself to one country or one continent. Instead, it takes a wider, international perspective.«De Volkskrant
»You want to read it all, and immediately.«De Groene Amsterdammer
»In ›Right to Return‹ Leon de Winter has written a nightmarish and visionary novel of Israel. An impressive, sombre novel. A master is here at work.«Die Welt
»From the very first words Leon de Winter has us in his grip. I have been waiting for this novel for four years. And Leon de Winter has not disappointed me.«Brigitte
»This novel is his masterpiece.«Focus
»Excitement and tension against a rich factual background are no obstacle to fine characterisation, and the compositional sweep and emotional excesses of the thriller have been brought off in masterly fashion. Sensational!«BuchMarkt
»Leon de Winter has once again found an almost breathtaking plot. His stories are never simple. They reflect his sense of topicality and of history, of the yesterday which gave birth to today.«Sächsische Zeitung
»Leon de Winter’s novel, which is as exciting as it is complex, is also a book about forbidden thoughts and self-delusion.«Münchner Merkur
»For every dilemma and every doubt which arises in the human soul and on the political stage, he finds painfully exact images. This is a truly great novel.«Westdeutsche Allgemeine