Ricarda Messner recounts family history in debut novel

In her debut novel 'Wo der Name wohnt', Ricarda Messner delves into the secrets of her Latvian roots and the loss of the family name Levitanus. The book draws from her own life, including her family's immigration to West Germany in 1971 and the uncovering of dark family secrets. Messner reflects on names, memory, and the voices of the dead.

Ricarda Messner's first novel 'Wo der Name wohnt', published by Suhrkamp in 2025, centers on the maternal family name Levitanus. The first-person narrator mourns this name, which dies out with her grandmother's death, and unsuccessfully applies for a name change from Berlin authorities. 'I mourned the name like a face, so I wanted to take it on', Messner explains in a ZEIT interview.

The story starts in Berlin with two neighboring houses, numbers 36 and 37, where Messner lived with her mother and grandparents. Her family fled Latvia for West Germany in 1971. Instead of a linear narrative, Messner uses an overlaid time structure to make the past tangible in the present. 'I'm interested in where and how the past appears in the now', she says.

A pivotal moment is the discovery at age 15: Documents reveal that most of her grandfather's family was murdered in Riga in 1941 by the German and Latvian SS. Messner incorporates authentic witness statements, notarially certified, and lets the dead act as co-narrators. The novel includes transcriptions and translations to capture the multilingual history.

Trips to Latvia with her family shaped Messner's observation of her mother's body language in Riga. Though Latvian and Russian languages were lost, she follows the stories. The 170-page book costs 23 euros in print and 19.99 euros as an e-book.

Articoli correlati

Crime scene illustration near Rönninge station in the Vilma Andersson suspected dismemberment murder case.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Vilma Andersson suspected of dismemberment murder in Rönninge

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA

A 25-year-old woman disappeared on the night leading to Boxing Day near Rönninge station and was later found dismembered. 26-year-old Vilma Andersson, who has a female first name but has not changed legal gender, was caught in the act handling body parts. He denies the murder but admits to gross desecration of a corpse.

L’economista Germán Redel lancia il suo libro d’esordio, Rosalí con tilde en la i e altre storie, una raccolta di undici racconti che alternano tra la dura pampa rurale della provincia di Buenos Aires e il polso introspettivo della vita urbana. Influenzato da autori come Borges e Hemingway, Redel trasforma ricordi personali in narrazioni crude e sensoriali. Il volume esplora silenzi, violenze e ricongiungimenti inaspettati.

Riportato dall'IA

Janet Mérida 'Janis' and Erika Maldonado 'Maldo', creators of the Morras Malditas podcast, released the book Apaguemos la luz y entremos a la noche, compiling supernatural legends from Oaxaca and Sonora. The work was presented at the Guadalajara International Book Fair 2025, where they discussed their trips to document these oral stories. In an interview with MILENIO, they expressed greater fear of the living than of the dead.

Writer Jorge Eliécer Peña, along with editor Ana Patricia Collazos and journalist Ricardo Ayerbe, presented the novel 'A las tumbas de la eternidad' at the Teatro Teófilo Carvajal Polanía in Pitalito. The event drew literature enthusiasts from the region.

Riportato dall'IA

Danish writer Ingeborg Topsøe discusses her debut Netflix series 'Secrets We Keep,' a thriller exploring privilege and class in affluent Copenhagen, which has garnered 40 million viewers worldwide since its May 15 launch. The show is a contender for the Nordic Series Script Award at Göteborg's TV Drama Vision on January 27. Topsøe draws from her upbringing to challenge Denmark's egalitarian image through the story of a missing Filipino au pair.

On January 3, 2026, Addis Fortune published a feature showcasing intimate reflections from Ethiopian writers. The panorama explores why they write, often with skepticism and personal depth.

Riportato dall'IA

Una donna di 45 anni e la sua figlia di 13 anni sono state accoltellate a morte nella loro casa a Villa Mercedes, San Luis, con i corpi scoperti sabato dopo una chiamata al 911. Due sospetti, una donna di 21 anni e il suo partner di 25 anni, sono stati arrestati a La Pampa mentre tentavano di fuggire. La famiglia, guidata dalla figlia maggiore Sol, ha espresso il suo profondo dolore e chiesto giustizia.

 

 

 

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta