Home
  • Leser:innen
  • Presse
  • Buchhandel
  • Foreign Rights
  • Film Rights
  • Theaterverlag
toggle menu
  • Books
  • Authors
  • Reprint Inquiries
  • About Diogenes
  • Catalogues
  • ←
  • Books
  • Authors
  • Reprint Inquiries
  • About Diogenes
  • Catalogues
  • Bereiche
    • Leser:innen
    • Presse
    • Buchhandel
    • Foreign Rights
    • Film Rights
    • Theaterverlag

Search results „am seil”

Blogposts (525)

Erich Hackl liest aus seinem neuen Buch ›Am Seil‹

from 16/08/2018

»Er hat sowohl das eigene als auch das Leben anderer hochgeschätzt. Darin ist er mir ein Vorbild.« Erich Hackls neues Buch ›Am Seil‹

from 27/07/2018

Vom verbindlichen Glanz der Literatur Erich Hackls

from 19/09/2018

Bücher gegen das Vergessen

from 08/05/2025

Eine Autorin – eine Stadt: 5 Sommertipps für Zürich von Seraina Kobler

from 14/07/2023

Die Freundschaft zwischen Jörg Fauser und Carl Weissner in Briefen von 1971-87

from 16/07/2021

Joachim B. Schmidts Brief über seinen neuen Roman ›Ósmann‹

from 18/04/2025

Ein Autor – eine Stadt. 10 Tipps von Benedict Wells für Barcelona.

from 26/07/2016

»Ich möchte zeigen, dass Verrat zwei Seiten hat.«

from 25/08/2016

»Die Seiten, die wir geliebt haben, wohnen tief in unserer Erinnerung.« Irene Vallejos Hommage an die Welt der Bücher

from 20/05/2022

Neu bei Diogenes: Donal Ryan »Die Sache mit dem Dezember«

from 23/02/2015

»In meinem Roman wird Bin Laden zu einem Monster mit menschlichem Gesicht.«

from 05/09/2016
More blogposts

Books and authors (1)

Filter
Author (1)→
Genre (1)→
Sing mir ein Lied
Im Warenkorb
Astrid Rosenfeld

Sing me a Song

With photographs by Johannes Paul Spengler. On the road across the USA, from the East to the West coast, notebook and camera at the ready. Pictures, landscapes, people, experiences and stories come unite in a song with many voices, a love song to traveling and to life before death. A loud bang – and the Mercedes 300 Turbo Diesel in which the author Astrid Rosenfeld and the photographer Johannes Paul Spengler wanted to drive from New York to San Franscisco has been crashed into by another car before they have even left Manhattan. Totalled. »You can’t kill a Mercedes«, the used-car salesman had told them, and that the car was in excellent condition with only one previous owner. His Eau de Toilette was even still in the glove compartment, and Astrid Rosenfeld secretly names the unknown man Frankie. And then the journey begins. Not in Frankie’s car, after all, but with his spirit and his story along for the ride nonetheless. An adventure-filled road trip across Georgia, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee and Texas to California, filled with crazy, absurd and heart-wrenching encounters.

Further readings
  • Fact sheet PDF
  • Extract in German
Erich Hackl

Erich Hackl

Erich Hackl, born in Steyr, Austria in 1954, studied German and Spanish and worked as a teacher and editor for a number of years. Madrid and Vienna, where he works as a writer and translator, have been home to him for a long time now. His stories are based on authentic cases. Aurora’s Motive and Farewell Sidonia are on school reading lists. Erich Hackl has received numerous awards, including the 2017 ›Human Rights Award‹ of the state of Upper Austria , the ›Anton Wildgans Prize 2015‹ by the Federation of Austrian Industry and the ›Award for Literature‹ from the city of Vienna in 2002.


  • Contact
  • Reprint Inquiries
  • Newsletter
  • Blog
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Mastodon
  • Leser:innen
  • Presse
  • Buchhandel
  • Foreign Rights
  • Film Rights
  • Theaterverlag
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Imprint
↑