Arno Geiger

Arno Geiger (born 22 July 1968) is an Austrian novelist.

Arno Geiger
Arno Geiger being interviewed in 2007
Born (1968-07-22) 22 July 1968
Bregenz
LanguageGerman
NationalityAustrian
Notable worksEs geht uns gut
Notable awardsDeutscher Buchpreis (2005)

Geiger grew up in the village of Wolfurt near Bregenz. He studied German studies, ancient history and comparative literature at the universities of Innsbruck and Vienna. He has worked as a freelance writer since 1993. From 1986 to 2002, he also worked as a technician at the annual Bregenzer Festspiele summer opera festival.

In 1996 and in 2004, he took part in the Ingeborg-Bachmann-Preis competition at Klagenfurt.

In October 2005, he was the recipient of the first Deutscher Buchpreis[1] literature prize (awarded by the booksellers' association of Germany) for his novel Es geht uns gut.

First published in 2011, Geiger's autobiographical The Old King in His Exile has now, with this translation into English (published by And Other Stories in 2017), been translated into 28 languages. The memoir has won literary prizes including the 2011 Friedrich Hölderlin Prize, as well as prizes from medical societies in various countries, including the 2011 German Hospice and Palliative Care Association (DHPV) Award.

Geiger lives in Wolfurt and Vienna.

Awards

  • 1994 Scholarship by the Austrian Ministry of Science and Culture
  • 1998 Abraham Woursell Award, New York (a talent award for young European writers)
  • 2001 Carl-Mayer-Drehbuch-Förderpreis, Graz (a screenplay award named for screenplay writer Carl Mayer (1894–1944))
  • 2005 Förderpreis zum Friedrich-Hölderlin-Preis, Bad Homburg (talent award)
  • 2005 Deutscher Buchpreis
  • 2011 Friedrich Hölderlin Prize
  • 2011 German Hospice and Palliative Care Association (DHPV) Award
  • 2011 Anton Wildgans Prize
gollark: Esolang where code is sorted before execution‽
gollark: It doesn't actually know exactly when births happen, and possibly can't due to light speed lag or whatever, so it just approximates.
gollark: Actually, I have a machine which automatically names all babies in existence for you.
gollark: What if local and global variables (and indeed those in ANY scope) stored in a hash table which can be modified and accessed by your code?
gollark: Idea: what if `strlen` hash function?

References

  1. Dougherty, Carter (20 December 2005). "The New German Novel: Less Weighty, More Exportable". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 January 2011.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.