Book prize winner Zora del Buono: “I was in a big drive”

Published: Sunday, Nov 17th 2024, 15:30

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Zora del Buono has been honored with the Swiss Book Prize 2024 for her novel "Seinetwegen". It is not the first and will not be the last literary research into her family history, as she told Keystone SDA on Sunday.

Zora del Buono, in your short speech after the announcement that you were to receive the book prize, you seemed very composed. Is that your nature or did you secretly expect it as the widely touted favorite?

Zora del Buono: Personally, I was expecting one of my young colleagues to win. We saw at the German Book Prize that it doesn't necessarily mean much if you're the favorite. I wouldn't have begrudged it to the others either. (Editor's note: Zora del Buono was on the longlist for this year's German Book Prize with "Seinetwegen").

Looking at the shortlist for the Swiss Book Prize, it's noticeable that you're not the only one to have dealt with your family's past. Is that a coincidence or a trend?

Zora del Buono: It's nothing new in the history of literature. You work with your own things. When it concerns you, the story takes on a greater urgency, which the Book Prize jury obviously appreciated.

Seinetwegen" is not the first time you have dealt with your family history. What is it that ties you so closely to your family history?

Zora del Buono: I'm planning to write a trilogy. The first was the novel "Die Marschallin" (2020) about my grandmother, followed by a big "Fräulein-Roman" about unmarried women in the 1960s and 70s with my aunt as a role model. This was actually intended to be the second novel, but now I've brought forward the third part with "Seinetwegen". In "Marschallin", my grandmother in the sophisticated southern Italian family proved to be a good character for a novel. This gave me the idea to continue here.

You spoke of a "quick book" in your acceptance speech. But the research for it must not have been that quick?

Zora del Buono: I was in a big drive, I wanted to know. I pushed it forward until I realized from time to time that it was perhaps going too fast. That's why I built in the coffee house conversations with friends, where the whole thing is broken up and reflected on again and again.

So these conversations are not fiction either?

No, they all took place. But of course my book is not a journalistic text, but a literary one.

In your novel, we learn a lot about the "slayer" E.T., as you call him, but not about your father, whom you lost as a child. Why is that?

I noticed that myself. That's why I put a stop at the end when describing E. T., so that you don't find out as much about him as you do about my father. But the book has given me so much feedback from people who knew my father personally, which I can now incorporate into my "Fräulein novel".

©Keystone/SDA

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