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Munich Literature Festival: Claudia Schumacher presents "Love is Powerful".

2022-11-02T16:36:08.151Z


Munich Literature Festival: Claudia Schumacher presents "Love is Powerful". Created: 02/11/2022 17:22 By: Michael Schleicher Claudia Schumacher presents her first novel with "Love is Powerful". © Roman Raacke Juli grows up in a model family. But her father is a whipping monster - the mother his "crime scene cleaner". Sounds like dismay prose? Claudia Schumacher's debut "Love is Powerful" is fa


Munich Literature Festival: Claudia Schumacher presents "Love is Powerful".

Created: 02/11/2022 17:22

By: Michael Schleicher

Claudia Schumacher presents her first novel with "Love is Powerful".

© Roman Raacke

Juli grows up in a model family.

But her father is a whipping monster - the mother his "crime scene cleaner".

Sounds like dismay prose?

Claudia Schumacher's debut "Love is Powerful" is far from it.

Now the author is presenting her novel at the Munich Literature Festival.

Heavy metal was born when Black Sabbath released their debut album, which bears the British band's name, in February 1970.

The title track slowly creeps up, a threatening wait in G minor, a damned hesitation and procrastination – until guitarist Tony Iommi and bassist Geezer Butler unleash musical madness after a few minutes, a surge and rage.

Meanwhile, Ozzy Osbourne sings about a – sorry!

– poor sow who has to realize that running away will bring absolutely nothing.

Because the devil himself has it in for the protagonist.

"Love is Powerful" is the first novel by Claudia Schumacher

Worse still: "Satan's sitting there, he's smiling." The Godseibeiuns, who sits there and smiles - this motif actually leads right into "Love is mighty".

Claudia Schumacher's remarkable debut novel

(dtv, Munich, 376 pages; 22 euros)

is not only a literary equivalent of the song "Black Sabbath" in terms of content, but also stylistically.

Reading at the Munich Literature Festival on November 19, 2022

The author, born in Tübingen in 1986, tells the story of Julia, known as Juli, a young woman who grows up in an outwardly harmonious world.

In three phases of life - 2007, 2014 and 2016 - the readers meet this person who was born on the sunny side of existence.

Swabian family to show off and envy, well off, small town villa in (fictitious) Ederfingen, father and mother are respected members of society - Juli himself is a math and arithmetic genius.

However: "I know you better than you know yourself," Papa kept saying when I was little - and took me away," Schumacher once said of her protagonist.

That's the big emotional issue Juli and her siblings deal with.

The father, however, not only occupied the souls of his children,

thus prevented them from developing: the respected, admired and well-loved lawyer everywhere becomes a cruel whipping monster at home.

To a devil who puts on his street shoes especially when he's beating up Juli's brother.

"Satan's sitting there, he's smiling."

Schumacher's style is far removed from dismayed prose

Schumacher lets the young woman talk about growing up in this terrible family, about her attempts at rebellion and liberation - also about her desire to belong.

This ensures great immediacy when reading, as if one were standing directly at the pits at the Sabbath concert – to stick with the image from the beginning.

Only in the last part of her book does the author change the narrative perspective and look at Juli's life from the outside.

A strong trick, because here it becomes clear that spatial distance does not necessarily mean freedom, that emotional dependency is sometimes more stubborn, meaner - and that it takes time to really resolve a trauma.

“Love is powerful” reads laconic and is rousing

phew

That sounds intense.

The surprising thing about this novel, however, is that it is about as far removed from dismay prose as Ozzy Osbourne by Hansi Hinterseer.

Schumacher has found an authentic, yes, in its laconic, funny and enormously entertaining style to tell of the wounds, pain and shame of her character - and of her struggle for emancipation.

In addition, the author succeeds in packing complex structures and tricky psychological processes into concise sentences.

"It's just the normality afterwards that's worse than war" is a sentence that Juli noted after his father's excess of violence.

In "normality" she has time to "ask questions".

Questions to which there are no answers.

For example how the mother was able to participate in all this?

Not only,

that she couldn't/wouldn't protect herself or her children.

No: "Mama, the crime scene cleaner" Juli calls her: "She stuffed our mouths with crumble cake and cream." It is exciting to read how Schumacher takes Juli away from the anesthesia with calories and sweets - spatially, linguistically, but above all emotionally.

"Is it the End, my Friend?" sings Osbourne in "Black Sabbath".

Is not it.

It's a start.

In many ways.

(More literature? Read our review of Stephen King's Fairy Tale here.)

sings Osbourne in "Black Sabbath".

Is not it.

It's a start.

In many ways.

(More literature? Read our review of Stephen King's Fairy Tale here.)

sings Osbourne in "Black Sabbath".

Is not it.

It's a start.

In many ways.

(More literature? Read our review of Stephen King's Fairy Tale here.)

also read

Thielemann as Barenboim's successor?

"By the way, I don't have to be the boss anymore"

"John Lennon was stinky at first": How Klaus Voormann designed an LP cover for the Beatles

Reading at the Munich Book Show:

Claudia Schumacher will be reading on November 19, 2022, 7 p.m. in the Gasteig HP8 as part of the Munich Book Show at the Munich Literature Festival.

Source: merkur

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