Maxim Biller
Template:Use dmy dates Template:Short description Maxim Biller (born 25 August 1960 in Prague, Czechoslovakia) is a German writer and columnist.
Early life
Born in Prague to Soviet Jewish parents, Rada Biller and Semjon-Jevsej Biller. He emigrated with his parents and sister to West Germany in 1970, when he was ten years old.[1] After living for a long time in Hamburg and Munich, he now lives in Berlin, frequently writing about issues relating to Jewish and German relations.[2] His maternal grandfather was Armenian.[3]
Works
In 2003 his novel Esra excited attention when its sale was prohibited shortly after its release. Two persons had a provisional order obtained, because they claimed to have seen themselves reflected in characters in the book. A German court obliged their request to take the book from circulation on these grounds.[4][5]
His first works translated into English (by Anthea Bell) are the collection Love Today (2008), some of which appeared in The New Yorker.[6]
Beliefs
Biller strongly identifies as a Zionist and is very critical of antisemitism within the anti-Zionist movement.[7]
Controversy
In June 2025, Biller published a column in Die Zeit titled Morbus Israel. In it, he described the Israeli government's starvation blockade of Gaza as "strategically correct." He also made a joke about an Israeli soldier who goes to a doctor and says he no longer wants to kill Arabs, to which the doctor advises him against stopping. Biller claimed that the German public exhibits a pathological obsession with Israeli policy during the war in Israel and Gaza. He wrote that critics of Israel’s actions in Gaza — such as Tilo Jung, Ralf Stegner, or Amnesty International — were on a “pathological, likely psychologically very stressful anti-Israel horror trip.” Following criticism of the column, The piece was quietly removed by Die Zeit because it apparently “did not meet the newspaper’s editorial standards”.[8] [9]
Publications
- Wenn ich einmal reich und tot bin: Erzählungen (Someday when I'm rich and dead: Narratives), Kiepenheuer & Witsch, Cologne 1990, Template:ISBN (including the narrative Harlem Holocaust)
- Die Tempojahre: Essays und Reportagen, Deutscher Taschenbuch-Verlag, Munich 1991, Template:ISBN
- Aufbruch nach Deutschland: Sechzehn Foto-Essays
- Land der Väter und Verräter: Erzählungen, Kiepenheuer & Witsch, Cologne 1994, Template:ISBN
- Harlem Holocaust (short novel), Kiepenheuer & Witsch, Cologne 1998, Template:ISBN
- Die Tochter, Kiepenheuer & Witsch, Cologne 2000, Template:ISBN
- Kühltransport, 2001
- Deutschbuch, 2001
- Esra : Roman, 2003, Template:ISBN (distribution was prohibited from publishing by court)
- Der perfekte Roman: Das Maxim-Biller-Lesebuch, 2003
- Bernsteintage: Erzählungen, 2004
- Maxim Biller Tapes (CD with songs and poems), 2004
- I Love My Leid (video), 2004
- Moralische Geschichten: Satirische Kurzgeschichten, Kiepenheuer & Witsch, Cologne 2005 Template:ISBN
- Adas größter Wunsch (children's book), 2005
- Menschen in falschen Zusammenhängen (comedy), 2006
- Liebe heute (short stories), 2007
- Ein verrückter Vormittag (children's book), 2008
- Der gebrauchte Jude (self-portrait), Kiepenheuer & Witsch, Cologne 2009, Template:ISBN
- Kanalratten (theater play), Fischer 2013 Template:ISBN
- Im Kopf von Bruno Schulz: Novelle, Kiepenheuer & Witsch, Cologne 2013, Template:ISBN
- Jack Happy (children's book), Atlantik, Hamburg 2014, Template:ISBN
- Biografie: Roman, Kiepenheuer & Witsch, Cologne 2016, Template:ISBN
- Mama Odessa: Roman, Kiepenheuer & Witsch, Cologne 2023, ISBN 978-3-462-00486-1
Awards
- 1994 Toucan Prize from the city of Munich
- 1996 Preis des Europäischen Feuilletons: "Feuilleton" are the culture pages in German speaking newspaper
- 1996 Template:Ill
- 1999 Theodor Wolff Prize
- 2008 Brothers Grimm Poetics Professorship of University of Kassel[10]
- 2012 Würth-Literaturpreis
References
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- ↑ "The Mahogany Elephant" (July 2007), "The Maserati Years" (September 2007).
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- ↑ Press release by Universität Kassel Template:Webarchive zur Grimm-Professur, 11. Dezember 2008.
- 1960 births
- Czechoslovak emigrants to Germany
- Czech people of Armenian descent
- Czech people of Russian-Jewish descent
- German people of Czech-Jewish descent
- German people of Russian-Jewish descent
- German male writers
- Jewish Czech writers
- Living people
- Writers from Prague
- German people of Armenian descent
- German Zionists
- Pages with script errors