Filter
Love in Case of Emergency
Daniela Krien’s debut Someday We'll Tell Each Other Everything has been translated into 15 languages and is being made into a film by director Emily Atef.
The new book by the award-winning (›Nicolas Born Debut Prize‹) outstanding writer is a touching and moving novel about five women, five lives, five fates.
Their names are Paula, Judith, Brida, Malika, and Jorinde. They know each other because fate or kinship holds them together. They are as different as they could be and yet their search for happiness unites them. But happiness is fleeting, turns sour and becomes pain, which the five women stand up against with all their might.
288 pages
2019
978-3-257-07053-8
»Whoever wants to know something about the life of today’s women in a hundred years, will learn it from Daniela Krien’s novel.«
»While reading the book the women become confidants and reveal themselves thereby remaining genuine, but most of all believable. Maybe that is the artistry, the literary concept of Daniela Krien, the familiar truthfulness of her characters, their touching intimacy.«
»Few intelligently entertaining German novels don’t ooze relevance yet are not afraid of existential seriousness. Fortunately, Krien has written one.«
»Love in Case of Emergency leaves an impression by giving an account of women who are looking for new ways to be happy after classic relationship models have failed.«
»In spite of its serious subject Love in Five Acts is a novel that will make your heart jump for joy. And a serious candidate for the shortlist of the ›German Book Prize‹. A real highlight among the 2019 spring titles.«
»Bit by bit she dissects her female protagonists thoughts and feelings and makes them accessible to us in her deliciously precise and extremely simple language.«
»This is a book which engages with twenty-first century debates around notions of femininity and feminism, empathising with an array of perspectives on the subject.«
»This is the one book that I would like to hand to everyone who wants to know something about contemporary German literature, the country and its people.«
»This is a touching and moving read, without ideological furore, but with an incredibly exact stance on everyday experiences.«
»Nothing in this life is for free. And this is why this book entertains and is food for thought, with remarkable women in their thirties and forties.«
»… how she balanced the existential seriousness of the text with lightness impressed me. I could have listened to her one more hour effortlessly.«
»Krien hits a nerve with a witty sociological portrait of today […].«
»This doesn’t happen often in German literature: A book that has no apparent claim to explaining the world – and yet delivers just that.«
»My favourite book of the year? Love in Five Acts by Daniela Krien.«
»It’s the book of the summer. [. . .] With her clear gaze and imaginative skill, Daniela Krien ensures that the scenes from her protagonists’ private lives cannot simply be pigeonholed as ‘chick lit’.«
»Written in unsentimental, affecting prose, this is an intelligent study of female desire, ambition and frailty«
»Sparse and precise«
»Their experiences of men, children and abortions (and work, horses and forests) are subtly interlinked«
»Make yourself a hot chocolate or pour a glass of Grauburgunder; you’ll be in Germany any minute«
»Utterly captivating ... A beautifully written masterclass in human frailty.«
»The writing is spare but meticulous, cutting to the heart of the matter in each of the five intimate novellas.«
»Unfailingly impressive«
»Punchy and entirely of the moment, Love in Five Acts engages head-on with what it is to be a woman in the twenty-first century.«
»A sympathetic and clear-eyed view of modern womanhood.«
»This portrait of five women is utterly captivating.«
»Love in five Acts explores what is left to five women when they have fulfilled their roles as wives, mothers, friends, lovers, sisters and daughters.«
»Krien's flat calm voice is both soothing and shocking as she guides her characters through love, marriage and affairs that often end abruptly.«
»Written in pleasingly exact and unfussy prose — crisply translated by Jamie Bulloch — this German bestseller interweaves the stories of five straight women, all around 40 years of age, living in Leipzig.«
»These are universal problems (though almost always women’s problems), distilled down to the particular, the domestic, the small-print of human bondage and the yearning for it, that underpins our daily lives.«
»Here is an author who knows how to tell a story. She draws precise portraits of women and creates exceptionally good milieu portrayals.«
»Highly Recommended«
»A beautiful novel«
»Beautifully direct and lucid prose«