Maaza Mengiste
Maaza Mengiste is a novelist and essayist whose work examines the individual lives at stake during migration, war, and exile, and considers the intersections of photography and violence. »Beneath the Lion’s Gaze«, her critically acclaimed debut novel, was selected by »The Guardian« as one of the 10 best contemporary African books and was named one of the best books of 2010 by »The Christian Science Monitor«, »The Boston Globe«, and other publications.
»Beneath the Lion’s Gaze« is set in Ethiopia in the 1970s and revisits the last days of the Ethiopian monarchy and the brutal beginnings of the Derg, the socialist military junta that replaced it. The story focuses on the Hailu family as they struggle to make difficult choices within a political climate that grows increasingly complex and dangerous. »Kirkus« calls »Beneath the Lion’s Gaze« »an arresting, powerful novel that works on both personal and political levels«.
Her second novel, »The Shadow King«, called a »lyrical, remarkable new novel« by »The New York Times« takes readers to 1935 Ethiopia during Mussolini’s invasion, in what many consider the first real conflict of World War II. It revolves around an army of ordinary women, since left out of the historical record, who join the front lines to fight against the fascists. Through complicated characters who face no easy answers, »The Shadow King« explores what it means to be a woman at war. In their starred review, »Publisher’s Weekly« praised Mengiste for »break[ing] new ground in this evocative, mesmerizing account of the role of women during wartime – not just as caregivers, but as bold warriors defending their country«. »The Shadow King«, called »one of the most beautiful novels of the year« by NPR, and was a finalist for both The Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction and the Man Booker Prize. A film adaptation is in the works to be directed by Kasi Lemmons [»Eve’s Bayou«, »Harriet«].
The winner of the 2020 Literature Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Mengiste’s honors include the Creative Capital Award, a Fulbright Scholarship, and fellowships from Guggenheim, the National Endowment for the Arts and Puterbaugh Festival of International Literature & Culture. She was a Runner-Up for the Dayton Literary Peace Prize for »Beneath the Lion’s Gaze«. Her work has appeared in »The New Yorker«, »Granta«, »The Guardian«, »The New York Times«, »Rolling Stone«, BBC Radio, and »Lettre International«, among other places.
Mengiste was also a writer on the documentary films »The Invisible City: Kakuma«, about a refugee camp in the middle of the Turkana desert in Kenya that has become the region’s fastest-growing community; and »Girl Rising«, which tells the stories of nine girls from developing nations around the world overcoming obstacles to education and security. »Girl Rising«, which features the voices of Meryl Streep, Liam Neeson, and Cate Blanchett, is part of the Girl Rising project, a global action campaign for girls’ education and empowerment.
Mengiste was born in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and lived in Nigeria and Kenya before moving to the United States. She currently serves on the boards of Words Without Borders and Warscapes. Her next book is »A Brief Portrait of Small Deaths«, a novel set in Berlin during the interwar years that focuses on the lives of Afro-German models who sat for some of Germanyʼs greatest painters and follows their lives as Nazism takes hold of Germany. A member of Black Artists for Freedom, Mengiste teaches English at Wesleyan University.
Date: 2022
Unter den Augen des Löwen
Verlag das Wunderhorn
Heidelberg, 2013
[Ü: Andreas Jandl]
Der Schattenkönig
dtv
München, 2021
[Ü: Brigitte Jakobeit u. Patricia Klobusiczky]