Poet
Silke Scheuermann
Silke Scheuermann
(Germany, 1973)
Biography
Silke Scheuermann received the prestigious Leonce-und-Lena-Preis in 2001 for her debut collection Der Tag an dem die Möwen zweistimmig sangen (The Day on which the Sea Gulls Sang in Two Parts). She was quickly recognised as the promising talent of the young generation of German writers. Nor has there been any lack of subsequent prizes and words of praise. Alongside her collections of poetry Der zärtlichste Punkt im All (The Most Tender Place in the Universe, 2004) and Über Nacht ist es Winter (Winter has Come Overnight, 2007) she has also published the collection of short stories Reiche Mädchen (Rich Girls, 2005) and the much-praised novel Die Stunde zwischen Hund und Wolf (The Hour between Dog and Wolf, 2007).
In terms of tone, the poetry balances between melancholy and irony, and a surfeit of pathos is sabotaged by the frequently laconic tone of the poems. The ‘big’ themes, such as love, death and life pass in review, sometimes in the foreground, sometimes only very drily and cursorily, without all that much fuss – a principle that the poet strives for, as can be seen from her poetic lines in which poems ‘glitter/in utmost transitoriness’ and are ‘random/wilful/and of dazzlingly bright/obviousness’. [Silke Scheuermann will take part in the Poetry International Festival Rotterdam 2008.
This text was written on that occasion.]
Links
Silke Scheuermann on Lyrikline
Poems
Poems of Silke Scheuermann
Sponsors
Partners
LantarenVenster – Verhalenhuis Belvédère