
Heinrich Böll
Heinrich Böll was born in Cologne in 1917 and passed away in Bonn in 1985. Coming from a middle-class Catholic family, he was raised with liberal ideas and learned to despise Nazism. However, in 1938, he was forced to interrupt his university studies to enlist in the army. During World War II, he served on various fronts, from France to the Soviet Union, until he was captured by the Americans. Due to frostbite, he lost his toes, resulting in lifelong hospital visits. In 1945, he returned to Cologne and soon established himself as one of the greatest writers of the post-war generation, recognized as a voice of conscience and one of the keenest observers of German society. His early novellas, "The Train Was on Time" and "Adam, Where Art Thou?" speak of the despair of those involved in the war. His later works, such as "Acquainted with the Night" and "The Unguarded House," address the moral void behind the "economic miracle" of post-war Germany, while "The Bread of Those Early Years" depicts the poverty, gloom, and hunger of the early post-war years. Other significant works include: "The Clown," "Group Portrait with Lady," "The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum," and "Women in a River Landscape." A critic of both NATO and the Soviet regime, a social democrat and pacifist, he drew harsh criticism from conservative circles, which persisted even when he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1972.