Charles Dickens, Tatjana Hauptmann (Ill.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Tomi Ungerer, Tomi Ungerer (Ill.)
Donna Leon
Donna Leon
Donna Leon
Tomi Ungerer, Tomi Ungerer (Ill.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Donna Leon
Erich Hackl
Hugo Loetscher
Tomi Ungerer, Daniel Kampa (Hg.), Tomi Ungerer (Ill.)
Donna Leon
Astrid Rosenfeld
Tatjana Hauptmann, Tatjana Hauptmann (Ill.)
Liaty Pisani
Friedrich Dürrenmatt
Lukas Hartmann, Tatjana Hauptmann, Tatjana Hauptmann (Ill.)
Doris Dörrie
Martin Suter
Martin Suter
Erich Hackl
Slawomir Mrozek
Slawomir Mrozek
Petros Markaris
Lukas Hartmann
Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman
Erich Hackl
Peter Urban (Hg.)
Petros Markaris
Claus-Ulrich Bielefeld, Bielefeld & Hartlieb, Petra Hartlieb
Erich Hackl
Friedrich Dürrenmatt
Andrzej Szczypiorski
›The thing looked bluish-white, was about fifteen centimetres high, rounded at the top with what looked like a convolution or crease half way down it that disappeared in the earth. (...) Oktavian returned to the gravediggers, and realized that he had been holding his breath. He supposed, he was almost sure, that the growths out there in the darkness were highly contaminous. They would combine the carcinogens injected by the doctors as well as the original berserk cells that had caused the cancer. How large would they become? And what was nourishing them? Terrifying questions! Oktavian, like most medical students, sent chums an odd part of the human anatomy once in a while. It was almost a token of affection when a fellow received such a present in the post from a girl student, but something like this? No.‹ Grotesque ulcerations, which grow to immense sizes; huge cockroaches resistant to all forms of insecticides, which take over the control of a New York apartment building; whales, the pope, a weapon-loving US president – all provide the material of which modern (natural and unnatural) catastrophes are made.
»These stories leave us haunted with after-images that will tremble – but stay in our minds.« The New Yorker
»Master storyteller Highsmith offers an eerily up-to-date collection of modern horror tales.« Publishers Weekly
»The best of Patricia Highsmith’s stories have a startling quality that may be likened to getting a shove near the edge of a train platform – even if we emerge physically unscathed, the daily routine can never seem so harmless again.«Book