Programmarchiv

Seit 2006 finden in der Lettrétage ca. 120 öffentliche Literaturveranstaltungen jährlich statt – Lesungen, Workshops, Diskussionsrunden, literarische Performances und Formate dazwischen. Bekannte und unbekannte Autor*innen und Künstler*innen verschiedener Sprachen und Nationalitäten sind hier schon aufgetreten.

Seit 2013 liegt der Programmfokus u.a. auf neuen Wegen der literarischen Präsentation und Live-Produktion: Dazu zählen u.a. die internationalen bzw. transnationalen Literaturfestivals „Soundout!“, „¿Comment!“, „Berlinisi“ und „Syn_Energy“, aber auch das viel beachtete Netzwerkprojekt „CROWD“ und multimediale Projekte wie die Reihe „CON_TEXT“ oder das „Poetry Audio Lab“. Eine vollständige Liste der Lettrétage-Projekte finden Sie hier.

Als Ankerinstitution für die freie Literaturszene Berlins stellt die Lettrétage außerdem ihre Räume für Literaturveranstaltungen aller Art zur Verfügung. Zahlreiche freie Veranstalter*innen nutzen unsere Infrastruktur regelmäßig – für Literatur-Workshops, Lesereihen in verschiedenen Sprachen und Buchpräsentationen. Mehr zu den Möglichkeiten der kostenlosen Raumnutzung erfahren Sie hier.

Auf dieser Seite präsentieren wir einen nicht vollständigen Einblick in unser vergangenes Programm.


Veranstaltungen

Termin Informationen:

  • Mo
    11
    Dez
    2023

    The Reading #10: The Shining Mountains with Alix Christie

    19:30Lettrétage in der Veteranenstraße 21, Eintritt: frei

    Book Launch with Alix Christie, Donovan Dennis and Joachim Zepelin

    (c) The Reader Berlin

    The Reader Berlin presents the Berlin book launch of THE SHINING MOUNTAINS with author Alix Christie in conversation with writer, publisher and journalist Joachim Zepelin. The evening will be accompanied by short fiction from Donovan Dennis.

    “The more we know of the past, the more we know of ourselves,” the Scottish fur trader Angus McDonald wrote in his ledger in Montana in the 1870s. Alix Christie’s novel THE SHINING MOUNTAINS follows a family saga set against the backdrop of America’s Rocky Mountain West. The year is 1838. The young Scotsman Angus McDonald flees his homeland to trade for fur in the unclaimed Oregon Country. There he discovers a world beyond even a Highlander's wildest imaginings: raging rivers, buffalo hunts, and the powerful daughter of an ancient and magnificent people. In Catherine Baptiste, kin to Nez Perce chiefs, Angus recognizes a kindred spirit. The world in which they fall in love will soon be torn apart by competing claims: between British fur traders, American settlers, and the Native peoples who have lived for millennia in the valleys and plateaus of the Shining Mountains.

    The true story of this union of the fur trade and indigenous worlds is based on Christie’s own family. Alix Christie, a direct descendant of Angus McDonald’s brother Duncan, met with her distant cousins and consulted extensively with the Nez Perce and Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes to write the story of her blended family.

    (c) Alix Christie

    Alix Christie is an American-Canadian novelist and journalist based in Berlin. Her debut novel, GUTENBERG’S APPRENTICE, the story of the making of the Gutenberg Bible, was shortlisted for the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award and long-listed for the International Dublin Literary Prize. Her story EVERYCHILD won the 2021 Jeffrey E. Smith Editor’s Prize in fiction from The Missouri Review and a Pushcart Prize. She has been a longtime foreign correspondent for newspapers including The Guardian and San Francisco Chronicle, and currently writes about culture for The Economist.

    (c) Donovan Dennis

    Donovan Dennis will read from his short story PRIMARY SUCCESSION set in present-day Montana. Donovan writes about glaciers, the climate crisis, contemporary life in the U.S., and the Montana of his youth. He is currently based in Berlin, where he works as a geoscientist. In his post-lockdown(s) life, he started trying his hand at writing short fiction. He recently published his piece IN THE SENATE WE READ DANTE AND I LOVED HIM in Hippocampus Magazine.

    Joachim Zepelin is a writer, journalist and former co-publisher of Secession Verlag für Literatur, which was awarded the Großer Berliner Verlagspreis in 2021.

    The elevator in the building is currently not operational. We apologize for this issue, as it restricts access to some extent.


Workshops & Infoabende

Termin Informationen:

  • Sa
    08
    Jun
    2019
    So
    09
    Jun
    2019

    Telling Tales: The Art of Creating Stories

    10:30 - 16:30Beitrag: 150€

    Workshop mit Roy MacLean

    Stories can entrance, engage, even possess us. Every one of us has a story to tell; factual or fictional, cool documentary or heartfelt family journey, practical travelogue or sparkling flight of the imagination. But to become an accomplished storyteller one needs time, a conducive environment, and a sensitive guide to direct and refine individual talent.

    In June best-selling author Rory MacLean will lead an exclusive, two-day creative non-fiction writing workshop in Berlin. Participants will be guided and supported on their creative journey. Both amateur and professional writers are invited to join. No experience is necessary. The only requirement is the passion to tell a story.

    The course will include morning talks on the craft of narration and introductory workshops on gathering material, note-taking, voice and structure. Rory will underline the importance of writing from the heart, using honesty and personal experience to fill one’s creative work with feeling and excitement. Afternoons will be dedicated to exercises and, if possible, one-to-one discussions or project pitches, helping to draw out individual skills. Together Rory and the participants will unpick the transformation of our ordinary encounters, epic journeys, family histories and imaginative quests into prose. Whether you aspire to writing journalism, a blog, memoir, personal essay or documentary, take this rare opportunity to work with one of the Reader’s favourite writers and most popular tutors.

    Rory MacLean is the author of more than a dozen books including the UK top tens "Stalin’s Nose" and "Under the Dragon" as well as "Berlin: Imagine a City", a book of the year and ‘the most extraordinary work of history I’ve ever read’ according to the Washington Post. His works – wrote the late John Fowles – are among those that ‘marvellously explain why literature still lives’. A Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, he divides his time between the UK, Canada and Berlin.

    To sign up please email hello@thereaderberlin.com. All of the info is available here.