
Novelist, short-story writer, essayist, critic, journalist, and film dramatist Christa Wolf was a citizen of East Germany and a committed socialist, and managed to keep a critical distance from the communist regime. Her best-known novels included “Der geteilte Himmel” (“Divided Heaven,” 1963), addressing the divisions of Germany, and “Kassandra” (“Cassandra,” 1983), which depicted the Trojan War. She won awards in East Germany and West Germany for her work, including the Thomas Mann Prize in 2010. The jury praised her life’s work for “critically questioning the hopes and errors of her time, and portraying them with deep moral seriousness and narrative power.” Christa Ihlenfeld was born March 18, 1929, in Landsberg an der Warthe, a part of Germany that is now in Poland. She moved to East Germany in 1945 and joined the Socialist Unity Party in 1949. She studied German literature in Jena and Leipzig and became a publisher and editor. In 1951, she married Gerhard Wolf, an essayist. They had two children. Christa Wolf died in December 2011. (Bloomberg News)
Books

Cassandra
A Novel and Four Essays
1983

Voraussetzungen einer Erzählung
Kassandra: Frankfurter Poetik-Vorlesungen
1983

Patterns of Childhood
1976

Cassandra
1983

Se la felicità... Per una critica al capitalismo a partire dall'essere donna
2021

Mit anderem Blick. Erzählungen
2005

We Know What Will Come
1979

Geschlechtertausch
Drei Geschichten über die Umwandlung der Verhältnisse
1980

Stadt der Engel oder The Overcoat of Dr. Freud
2010

One Day a Year
2001-2011
2013

Medea
1996

Der geteilte Himmel
1963

Sommerstück
1989

The Author's Dimension
Selected Essays
1993

Accident
A Day's News
1987

August
2012

One Day a Year
1960-2000
1982

Unter den Linden
1974

What Remains and Other Stories
1990

The Quest for Christa T.
1968

Leibhaftig
2002