Magath’s top-secret plan: winning the 2011-championship with Bochum

There’s one thing my coach never tired of saying to me: “Hau den Ball ins Tor hinein!” – best translated with: “Just slam it into the back of the net!” What did yours used to say to you? What about this one: “The country’s going to the dogs! Everything was better back then!”
1958: In the old communist GDR, food rationing was finally ended, although East Germany had to wait for Helmut Kohl and the fall of communism to get their promised land. This was also the year in which Elvis Presley arrived in Germany to do his national service in the army; seemingly by chance, another music legend Michael Jackson was born. A 17-year old Brasilian named Pélé wrote World Championship history in Sweden and Schalke 04 won the German league for the seventh and last time.
1988: This is the year in which Mikhail Gorbachev declared that every socialist state should be free to develop its own societal model – if he’d only known what that would lead to… Enzo Ferrari, the greatest Italian racing driver ever died and Rihanna, the American R&B singer, was born. The Dutch won the European Championship, their only ever international title, in Germany of all places; and Bayer Leverkusen celebrated its greatest triumph as UEFA cup winners.
2008: In the US, Lehman Brothers reports bankruptcy and Barack Obama becomes the first ever Afro-American president. Even more importantly in some people’s eyes: Nicolas Sarkozy marries Carla Bruni. Spain become European Champions after beating Germany in the final and Bayern Munich take the German league title for the 21st time.
2010: Three teams, three aims – Schalke 04, Bayer Leverkusen, Bayern München, or “were champions an incredibly long time ago”, “were never champions” and “are record holders” – and the recent 28th day of play was decisive in deciding to which of these three contenders the championship might fall. Whilst Munich surprised everyone by losing their home game 1:2 to VfB Stuttgart, Schalke also surprised by winning in Leverkusen by 2:0 and taking the top-spot in the league table.
As recently as last week, Bayern were still able to pull off a convincing performance and look like they deserved to be in the cup final. Now, despite good play, they fell victim to an unlucky equaliser followed be a short but intense period of pressure from Stuttgart. This was the second league defeat in a row for Munich and as such gave Schalke and Leverkusen the chance they needed to conquer the heights of the table.

And oddly enough, it was Schalke that made the most of this opportunity. The “almost could-haves”, as Schalke are known, did not play like a top team in their cup match against Bayern, but in this championship game, they dominated the team in third place in the league, Leverkusen. Waiting to counter-attack, compact and good in one-to-ones, ready to run their opponents ragged and suffocate any signs of recovery – that’s how Magath likes to play. His team made a great show of implementing this strategy and won the game through two goals from Kuranyi. The 29th day of play will now see a duel with Bayern, and it will be interesting to see whether the lads from Schalke look better than in the cup match – if they win, it would be a sure sign that history is about to repeat itself, just as Schalke, by beating Wolfsburg, took a decisive game against Munich; and it would become even clearer than Magath has a very precise top-secret plan for exactly this sort of occasion. It doesn’t matter which team his takes the championship with – any team that follows his secret strategy is bound to win. Bochum, for example, will take the championship with him next year, and Bayern München will soon realise that everything really was better back then.
Kevin Kuranyi and his two goals have really put Germany’s coach Joachim Löw under pressure to cap him for the world championship in South Africa; then again, it was Kuranyi who left the national team by his own choice – but everything is different now. Kuranyi has scored 17 times and, compared with the lacklustre performance of players like Klose, Gomez, Podolski and Helmes, Löw is fast running out of reasons not to bring him in.
At the other end of the table, the five teams languishing at the bottom were all incapable of winning. Hannover96 were notable for a particularly poor performance, losing 1:4 to 1. FC Köln and thereby earning themselves a top spot: in the second division.
In recent years, the boys at Bremen were able to have a good laugh at the expense of their northern rivals Hamburg. And whilst HSV are, as ever, ruining their season and tearing themselves to shreds as players go public about leaving and the trainer has to take all kinds of criticism, Werder Bremen just keep on their steady course into the cup final, leaving their Nordic arch enemy standing. Quite symptomatic of this day of play: Bremen claimed a 4:2 victory against Nuremburg whilst Hamburg took a 0:1 loss to Mönchengladbach.

(Stefan Reichart / Brian Melican)

Results Matchday 28:
VfL Bochum – Eintracht Frankfurt 1:2
1. FSV Mainz 05 – VfL Wolfsburg 0:2
Bayern München – VfB Stuttgart 1:2
Hertha BSC Berlin – Borussia Dortmund 0:0
Hannover 96 – 1. FC Köln 1:4
Werder Bremen – 1. FC Nürnberg 4:2
Bayer Leverkusen – FC Schalke 04 0:2
1899 Hoffenheim – SC Freiburg 1:1
Borussia Mönchengladbach – Hamburger SV 1:0

Table
1 FC Schalke 04 58 P
2 Bayern München 56 P
3 Bayer Leverkusen 53 P
4 Borussia Dortmund 49 P
5 Werder Bremen 48 P
6 Hamburger SV 44 P
7 VfB Stuttgart 41 P
8 Eintracht Frankfurt 41 P
9 VfL Wolfsburg 40 P
10 1. FSV Mainz 05 38 P
11 1899 Hoffenheim 34 P
12 Borussia Mönchengladbach 34 P
13 1. FC Köln 31 P
14 VfL Bochum 27 P
15 1. FC Nürnberg 25 P
16 SC Freiburg 24 P
17 Hannover 96 23 P
18 Hertha BSC Berlin 19 P

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Magaths geheimer Plan: 2011 Meister mit Bochum

„Haach de Klicker ins Goal enei!“, hat mein Trainer immer zu mir gesagt. So einfach ist Fußball. „Hau den Ball ins Tor hinein!“ Oder hat Ihrer statt dessen gesagt: „Früher war alles besser.“? Wer hat das noch nicht gehört?

1958: In der DDR werden die Lebensmittelkarten abgeschafft. Doch erst mit Helmut Kohl werden die blühenden Landschaften kommen. Elvis Presley trifft in der Bundesrepublik ein, um seinen US-Wehrdienst abzuleisten. Genau in dem Jahr, in dem Michael Jackson geboren wird. Ein Zufall? Ein 17-jähriger Brasilianer namens Pelé schreibt in Schweden WM-Geschichte. Und der FC Schalke 04 wird zum siebten und letzten Mal deutscher Fußballmeister.

1988: Generalsekretär Michail Gorbatschow betont, dass jeder sozialistische Staat sein gesellschaftliches System frei wählen könne. Wenn er gewußt hätte, was er damit lostritt… Enzo Ferrari, der große italienische Rennfahrer stirbt und Rihanna, die amerikanische R&B-Sängerin wird geboren. Die Niederlande holen mit der Europameisterschaft ihren einzigen internationalen Fußballtitel ausgerechnet in Deutschland. Und Bayer Leverkusen feiert seinen größten Triumph: Uefa-Pokal-Sieger.

2008: Das Finanzinstitut Lehman Brothers meldet Insolvenz an. Barack Obama wird als erster Afroamerikaner zum Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten gewählt. Wichtiger: Nicolas Sarkozy heiratet Carla Bruni. Spanien wird Europameister durch einen Finalsieg gegen Deutschland. Und Bayern München wird zum 21. Mal deutscher Meister.

2010: Drei Mannschaften, drei Sehnsüchte. Schalke 04, Bayer Leverkusen, Bayern München. Vor endlos langer Zeit Meister, noch nie Meister, Rekordmeister. Der 28. Spieltag hat ein Signal gesetzt, zu wessen Gunsten das Meisterschaftspendel ausschlagen könnte. Während Bayern München überraschend sein Heimspiel gegen den VfB Stuttgart 1:2 verlor, gewann Schalke ebenfalls etwas unerwartet in Leverkusen 2:0 und ist nun Tabellenführer.

Die Bayern konnten Mitte letzter Woche noch beim Pokalhalbfinale bei Schalke 04 überzeugen und verdient ins Finale einziehen. Nun unterlagen sie trotz ordentlicher Leistung, wegen eines unglücklichen Ausgleichstreffers und einer kurzen, aber erfolgreichen Drangperiode der Stuttgarter. Die zweite Liganiederlage der Münchener in Folge bot die Chance für Schalke und Leverkusen, die Tabellenspitze zu erklimmen.


Bemerkenswerter Weise nutzte diese Möglichkeit Schalke. Im Pokal gegen Bayern spielten „die Knappen“ nicht wie eine Spitzenmannschaft. Doch nun in der Meisterschaft dominierten sie souverän den Tabellendritten Leverkusen. Auf Konter lauern, kompakt, zweikampfstark, lauffreudig das Offensivspiel des Gegners ersticken – das ist Felix Magaths Spielweise. Seine Mannschaft setzte sie beeindruckend um und gewann verdient durch zwei Kuranyi-Tore. Am 29. Spieltag kommt es nun zum Duell mit den Bayern. Präsentieren sich die Schalker dann besser als im Pokal und gewinnen, wäre es die Vorentscheidung. Magath würde die Geschichte der letzten Saison wiederholen, als er mit Wolfsburg auch im April das entscheidende Spiel gegen die Münchener gewann. Und es wird klar: Magath hat für diese Fälle einen genauen, geheimen Plan. Mit welchem Team er Meister wird ist egal. Jedes Team, das seinen Plan befolgt, schafft es. Nächstes Jahr wird er mit dem VfL Bochum deutscher Meister. Und Bayern kommt zu der Erkenntnis: „Früher war alles besser.“

Felix Magath zum Spiel in Leverkusen

Kevin Kuranyi setzt mit seinen Toren weiter Bundestrainer Joachim Löw unter Druck, ihn mit zur WM zu nehmen. Dabei darf man nicht vergessen, dass es Kuranyi selbst war, der aus der Nationalmannschaft flüchtete. Doch nun ist alles anders. Kuranyi traf schon 17 mal und Löw gehen ob der Leistungen von Klose, Gomez, Podolski oder Helmes die Argumente gegen Kuranyi aus.

Am Tabellenende konnten die letzten Fünf des Klassements nicht gewinnen. Hannover 96 gab dabei eine besonders schwache Vorstellung und lieferte mit dem 1:4 gegen den 1. FC Köln ein Bewerbungsspiel für die zweite Liga.

Kräftig lachen können sie in Bremen alle Jahre wieder über den Nordrivalen Hamburger SV. Während der HSV in der Rückrunde erneut die Saison vergeigt, sich zerfleischt, Spieler Abwanderungsgedanken äußern und der Trainer in der Kritik steht, sind die Bremer dank Kontinuität ins Pokalfinale marschiert und haben mit einer Aufholjagd auf die Europa League-Plätze den Nebenbuhler hinter sich gelassen. Symptomatisch dieser Spieltag: Bremen gewinnt 4:2 gegen Nürnberg, der HSV scheitert mit 0:1 in Mönchengladbach.

Wie ist Ihre Meinung zu Schalke 04 und Magath? Schreiben Sie uns einen Kommentar in unseren Blog.
For an english Bundesliga blog click http://blog.young-germany.de

Die Ergebnisse des 28. Spieltags:
VfL Bochum – Eintracht Frankfurt 1:2
1. FSV Mainz 05 – VfL Wolfsburg 0:2
Bayern München – VfB Stuttgart 1:2
Hertha BSC Berlin – Borussia Dortmund 0:0
Hannover 96 – 1. FC Köln 1:4
Werder Bremen – 1. FC Nürnberg 4:2
Bayer Leverkusen – FC Schalke 04 0:2
1899 Hoffenheim – SC Freiburg 1:1
Borussia Mönchengladbach – Hamburger SV 1:0

Tabelle
1 FC Schalke 04 58 P
2 Bayern München 56 P
3 Bayer Leverkusen 53 P
4 Borussia Dortmund 49 P
5 Werder Bremen 48 P
6 Hamburger SV 44 P
7 VfB Stuttgart 41 P
8 Eintracht Frankfurt 41 P
9 VfL Wolfsburg 40 P
10 1. FSV Mainz 05 38 P
11 1899 Hoffenheim 34 P
12 Borussia Mönchengladbach 34 P
13 1. FC Köln 31 P
14 VfL Bochum 27 P
15 1. FC Nürnberg 25 P
16 SC Freiburg 24 P
17 Hannover 96 23 P
18 Hertha BSC Berlin 19 P

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Leipzig by night


After four successful days of the latest in literature, comics, and audio productions, the Leipzig Book Fair opened its doors one last time on Sunday. With the most visitors to date, the organizers of the book fair can look back on a delightful event. Europe’s largest literary festival “Leipzig Liest” (“Leipzig reads”) took place parallel to the book fair. One of my fist stops in this festival was at the Moritzbastei, an old bastion that was built in the 16th century.

In the nostalgic cellar of the Moritzbastei the “Lange Leipziger Lesenacht” (“long night of reading”) gave young and upcoming authors the opportunity to read to a small audience. It was so special because you could enjoy this rare event until late into the night.

The newly included music and audio book area of Leipzig book fair was especially highly acknowledged, contributing to the fairs wide range of literature. Music also played a prominent role throughout the whole festival. Therefore, after the intimate reading at the bastion, I went on to the popular jazz bar, Spizz.

On my way there I passed a villa in the heart of Leipzig that was lit up by bright and colorful lights. At first I didn’t understand why people were gathering in front of this building, but when I came closer I realized that the reading that was being held inside was transmitted over a speaker system. This made for a relaxed mood, making me feel as if I was walking through a small town in the Mediterranean. This feeling was enhanced when I arrived at the Spizz bar, where people were enjoying food and drink outside on a warm spring evening while listening to the music coming from inside the venue. I went inside where another reading was held.

I entered the room and was immediately taken in by the wonderful atmosphere. The exciting combination of spoken word and live jazz let me really enjoy the stories about Louis Armstrong’s travels in the GDR. For me this seemed like a once-in-a-lifetime experience, but the amazing thing is that it happens every year! I thought it was so great how this city participated in the fair in such a nonchalant way. I can highly recommend this event as a must-see for anyone coming to Germany.

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Away Games: The Curse of the Top Trio

There’s one thing my coach never tired of saying to me: “Hau den Ball ins Tor hinein!” – best translated with: “Just slam it into the back of the net!” What did yours used to say to you? What about this one: “If we want to win the championship, we need to win away games!”? If you’ve ever played at the top of a league, then you’ve probably heard that one before.


Teams in the Bundesliga don’t appear see things that way, though. Neither record-holders Bayern München, nor the gutsy Schalke 04, nor even title contenders Bayer Leverkusen were able to win their away games on match day 27.

Things used to be different, of course.  Back then, host sides knew as soon as they saw the team bus with the Munich licence plates that they were on a hiding to nothing. Nowadays, that’s simply no longer the case. When playing away this season, it seems that Bavaria have decided to try being nicer guests, swapping their dangerous goal-scoring for a more friendly style of play. Just look at their performance in the Champions’ League: while Manchester United made sure they went through playing Milan on home-ground, Munich barely scraped through Florence and have only Arjen Robben to thank for staying them in the running. They aren’t doing any better in the Bundesliga either, drawing 1:1 in Cologne and Nuremberg and losing 1:2 in Frankfurt – this kind of mediocre performance is more than just one player like Arjen Robben can make up for. The biggest German tabloid daily, Bild, called it nothing more than “cruddy football”, and they’re right: Bayern deserved to lose to Eintracht Frankfurt, who showed their class by turning the match around with two goals in the closing minutes – it kind of reminds you of Manchester, 1999. This kind of poor performance should really lose a team the top-spot in their league, but it doesn’t work that way in the Bundesliga.

Munich’s competitors for the top spot didn’t make much of their big chance though; like a fortnight ago when they lost to Nuremberg, Bayer Leverkusen just couldn’t seize the opportunity handed to them on a plate by Munich. While Leverkusen played strongly in the first half in Dortmund – Kießling  and Derdiyok really should have taken the match – football is, as we know, a game of two halves; and Dortmund used the second half to their advantage. The Argentinian Lucas Barrios scored two goals, making him the most popular player at Germany’s largest stadium, the Westfalenstadion. Leverkusen left it with a lot of pent-up frustration and a 0:3 defeat.

Now to Schalke. At some point, Schalke is going to have to mount an assault on the upper ranges of the table if they want to be champions; but once again, they didn’t. Kuranyi may well be on such good form at the moment that he’d score blindfolded in the middle of the night (he’s scored 15 goals this season and three in the last three games), but that just wasn’t enough to secure a victory against HSV, with whom Schalke drew 2:2 after an exciting 90 minutes.

It’s as if the three teams leading the league all decided to not win away this weekend. Next week will be exciting, though, with Schalke playing away to Leverkusen and then at home to Bayern München, before the Müncheners then head off to Leverkusen the week after. Hopefully, after all of that, we’ll know who’s going to be champion.

The one real sensation on this match day 27 happened in Wolfsburg: Berlin’s Hertha BSC, currently battling hopelessly against relegation, went to Wolfsburg and secured a stonking 5:1 victory. Nevertheless, you could kind of tell that was going to happen, what with one half of the team from Berlin wanting to show their ex-manager Dieter Hoeneß(now at Wolfsburg) that they were worthy of him signing them and the other half wanting to settle an old score and beat him. It certainly wouldn’t be a surprise if the dangerous five-goal duo Gekas and Ramos were to replace Wolfsburg’s Dzeko-Grafite combo next season…

(Stefan Reichart / Brian Melican)

Results Match day 27:
1. FC Köln   -  Borussia Mönchengladbach  1:1
Eintracht Frankfurt   -  Bayern München  2:1 
1. FC Nürnberg   -  1899 Hoffenheim  0:0
VfB Stuttgart   -  Hannover 96  2:0
Werder Bremen   -  VfL Bochum  3:2
SC Freiburg   -  1. FSV Mainz 05  1:0
Borussia Dortmund   -  Bayer Leverkusen  3:0
Hamburger SV   -  FC Schalke 04  2:2
VfL Wolfsburg   -  Hertha BSC Berlin 1:5

Table
1   Bayern München    56 P
2   FC Schalke 04    55 P
3   Bayer Leverkusen     53 P
4   Borussia Dortmund     48 P
5   Werder Bremen   45 P
6   Hamburger SV    44 P
7   VfB Stuttgart    38 P
8   Eintracht Frankfurt   38 P
9   1. FSV Mainz 05  38 P
10   VfL Wolfsburg 37 P
11   1899 Hoffenheim   33 P
12   Borussia Mönchengladbach  31 P
13   1. FC Köln   28 P
14   VfL Bochum   27 P
15   1. FC Nürnberg 25 P
16   Hannover 96   23 P
17   SC Freiburg  23 P
18   Hertha BSC Berlin  18 P

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Der Auswärtsfluch des Spitzentrios

„Haach de Klicker ins Goal enei!“, hat mein Trainer immer zu mir gesagt. So einfach ist Fußball. „Hau den Ball ins Tor hinein!“ Oder hat Ihrer statt dessen gesagt: „Wenn wir Meister werden wollen, müssen wir auswärts gewinnen!“? Wenn Sie um den Titel mitgespielt haben, dann bestimmt.

Die Vereine in der Fußball-Bundesliga sehen das nicht so. Weder Rekordmeister Bayern München, noch Meister der Herzen Schalke 04 oder Titelkandidat Bayer Leverkusen konnten ihre Begegnungen des 27. Spieltags gewinnen.
Dabei wusste früher bei der Anreise des Millionenensembles aus München zu einem Auswärtsspiel jeder Gegner: „Gegen DIE gibt es nichts zu holen.“ Doch weit gefehlt. Die Bayern sind auswärts in dieser Saison auf Kuschelkurs. Vorbei die Zeiten des gefährlich zielstrebigen Punkte-Beutezugs. Siehe Champions League: Während Viertelfinalgegner Manchester United schon beim Gastspiel in Mailand das Weiterkommen klar macht, schummeln sich die Münchener zu einer knappen Niederlage in Florenz und haben es nur Arjen Robben zu verdanken, noch im Wettbewerb zu verbleiben. Nicht besser in der Bundesliga: 1:1 in Köln, 1:1 in Nürnberg, jetzt 1:2 in Frankfurt – gegen dieses vereinigte Bundesliga-Mittelmaß hilft auch EIN Arjen Robben alleine nicht mehr. „Rumpelfußball“ hat das die Bild-Zeitung mal genannt. Völlig zu Recht unterlag Bayern überlegenen Frankfurtern 1:2, die in den letzten Minuten des Spiels die Partie mit zwei Toren drehten. Manchester 1999 lässt grüßen. So eine Leistung müsste mit dem Verlust des Spitzenplatzes bestraft werden. Doch nicht in der Bundesliga.
Bayer Leverkusen nutzte die Steilvorlage aus München nicht. Wie schon vor zwei Wochen bei der Niederlage in Nürnberg konnten die Rheinländer aus dem Ausrutscher der Konkurrenz kein Kapital schlagen. Zugegeben, Leverkusen spielte in der ersten Halbzeit stark in Dortmund. Kießling und Derdiyok hätten die Partie entscheiden müssen. Doch noch immer hat ein Spiel zwei Halbzeiten – und da drehten die Dortmunder auf. Der Argentinier Lucas Barrios war mit zwei Toren der gefeierte Mann in Deutschlands größtem Stadion und Leverkusen trat frustriert die Heimreise an. Im Gepäck ein 0:3.
Na jetzt aber, Schalke. Irgendwann müssen die Schalker doch mal die Tabellenspitze an sich reißen, wenn sie am Ende Meister werden wollen. Doch auch diesmal wurde es nichts. Kuranyi trifft zwar mittlerweile wahrscheinlich sogar nachts, mit verbundenen Augen jedes Tor – Saisontreffer 15, dritter Treffer im dritten Spiel in Folge – aber in einer spannenden Partie mit Chancen auf beiden Seiten, gab es am Ende ein 2:2 beim HSV.
So wollen es also die drei Topteams untereinander ausmachen. Nächste Woche geht es los: Schalke zu Gast in Leverkusen. Danach dann Bayern München „auf“ Schalke und wiederum eine Woche später Bayern in Leverkusen. Hoffentlich wissen wir in drei Wochen wer Meister wird…
Die Sensation des Spieltags fand in Wolfsburg statt. Die Hoffnungslosen aus Berlin machen es vor und gewinnen auswärts. Hertha siegte in Wolfsburg 5:1. Dabei war klar, dass Berlin dort gewinnen würde: die eine Hälfte der Berliner Mannschaft wollte beim Ex-Hertha- und heutigen Wolfsburg-Manager Dieter Hoeneß für einen Vertrag vorspielen. Die andere Hälfte wollte es dem Ex-Vorgesetzten noch mal so richtig beweisen. Sollte mich nicht wundern, wenn das 5-Tore-Sturmduo Gekas-Ramos bald Dzeko-Grafite in Wolfsburg ersetzt.

(Stefan Reichart)

Was glauben Sie wer Meister wird? Schreiben Sie einen Kommentar zu diesem Blog.
For an english Bundesliga blog click http://blog.young-germany.de

Die Ergebnisse des 27. Spieltags im Überblick:

1. FC Köln   -  Borussia Mönchengladbach  1:1
Eintracht Frankfurt   -  Bayern München  2:1 
1. FC Nürnberg   -  1899 Hoffenheim  0:0
VfB Stuttgart   -  Hannover 96  2:0
Werder Bremen   -  VfL Bochum  3:2
SC Freiburg   -  1. FSV Mainz 05  1:0
Borussia Dortmund   -  Bayer Leverkusen  3:0
Hamburger SV   -  FC Schalke 04  2:2
VfL Wolfsburg   -  Hertha BSC Berlin 1:5

Tabelle

1   Bayern München    56 P
2   FC Schalke 04    55 P
3   Bayer Leverkusen     53 P
4   Borussia Dortmund     48 P
5   Werder Bremen   45 P
6   Hamburger SV    44 P
7   VfB Stuttgart    38 P
8   Eintracht Frankfurt   38 P
9   1. FSV Mainz 05  38 P
10   VfL Wolfsburg 37 P
11   1899 Hoffenheim   33 P
12   Borussia Mönchengladbach  31 P
13   1. FC Köln   28 P
14   VfL Bochum   27 P
15   1. FC Nürnberg 25 P
16   Hannover 96   23 P
17   SC Freiburg  23 P
18   Hertha BSC Berlin  18 P

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Comics at the Leipzig Book Fair

japanfreax

At the stand of the "Japanfreaxx"

The first day of the Leipzig Book Fair came to an end with an anticipated award ceremony, honoring authors in three categories with a prize endowed in total with € 45,000. Amongst the nominees was 18 year-old Helene Hegemann with her highly debatted debut novel, that first caused an outcry of astonishment, which later turned to loud groans of dissapproval because parts of it were found to be plagiarised.

pokemon-game

Girl showing the boys how to play Pokemon

The question of originality arised, leading to a nation-wide discussion of her book “Axolotl Roadkill”. To the delight of many, (and to the disappointment of some) Helene Hegemann did not win the prize, instead it was Georg Klein for his “Novel of Childhood”.

Day two of the Leipzig Book Fair continued in full flow with more than 60.000 people streaming from one hall to the next. The exhibition grounds are made up of six large halls, each focusing on a main topic. There is a hall dedicated to german publishing houses, one for international publications and one devoted to music and media productions. But the largest hall indulges in the grand sphere of comics.

naruto

Manga-Hero Naruto

When I entered into Hall 2 of the Leipzig Book Fair, the doors to a new world opened infront of my eyes. Loud tunes, bold colors and the sweet smell of candy overtook my senses and suddenly, I felt like I was a ten year-old child again. My ears filled with the sound of children’s laughter, who came in groups to see where all their favorite comics came from: Japan.

Japan is the home of Mangas, one of the most popular comic amongst children and adults nowadays. As I learned, a manga character by the name of Naruto is their hero.

Naruto quickly became my hero when I saw his larger than life puppet towering infront of me, two meters tall, walking with Hello Kitty and some other colleagues. They were not the only comic-characters I ran into; many visitors decided to go all out and dress up as their favorite character, as well.

r1013029

Playing Wii

Some decided to stand in the limelight and get some attention walking around as a comic character, but many came to take part in the popular Cosplay, a costume play event for comic fans that lasts over the entire book fair weekend.

I left the exhibition grounds with a huge grin on my face, looking back at all the new things I discovered on the book fair today and looking toward the upcoming events of the evening: a reading in a dungeon followed by one in a jazz bar. In my next blog I will take you through the journey of the Leipzig Book Fair by night.

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Live from the Leipzig Book Fair

Copyright: Leipziger Buchmesse

This morning at 9 AM the annual Leipzig Book Fair successfully kicked off four days dedicated solely to literature, new book arrivals, and other book-related events. More than 2000 publishers from 39 countries are here in Leipzig to present not only their newest publications, but also to take a look at the journey a book undergoes before it lands in our hands.

This year’s extra-program “Leipzig Liest“, which I have renamed the “LL“, invited 1500 authors from across the nation to come together and read texts to their fans in cafés and bars. Almost every café in the saxonian city can call itself a proud host to a reading event of the “LL“. Tonight promises many cool events at even cooler locations, like a reading with jazz at the jazz-bar Spizz and several readings at the renouned Moritzbastei.

Dating back to the 16th century, the Leipzig Book Fair remains a significant event in the literary world. This year’s trade show focuses on younger readers and authors. Therefore, a large section of the fair is devoted to comics and slam-poetry, which I will approach in more depth in a later post. And of course many publishers are involved in the heated debate about e-books.

On the train to Leipzig, German author Anselm Neft read from his collection of short stories. His stories were very entertaining and my train ride was over much faster than I expected. Actually, it was supposed to be the infamous Helene Hegemann reading to us. Unfortunately she cancelled, but Mr. Neft was a worthy replacement with his book “Die Lebern der Anderen” (“The Livers of the Others”).

Keep updated with everything happening at the Leipzig Book Fair right here and on twitter!

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