Sigrid Combüchen


Sigrid Combüchen is a Swedish novelist, essayist, literary critic and journalist.

Career

Sigrid Combüchen was born in Solingen in the Ruhr territory). Shortly after the War her family moved to Sweden.
Sigrid Combüchen made her debut at the age of eighteen with the novel Ett rumsrent sällskap, 1960. She worked in journalism and on her academic degree before she returned to fiction seventeen years later with the novel I norra Europa and then Värme in 1980.
Her first internationally renowned novel is Byron, published in 1988. The book paints a picture of the English poet through a compositional change between present and past where Byron is partly illustrated by a group of Byron enthusiasts of today, partly through the environment in his own time. It was translated into among other languages English, German, French, Spanish and Dutch the following years.
She has through a period of twenty years written three novels studying the change of mentality in national life.
She has used themes of saga, as well as fantasy in i e "Parsifal", a dystopian novel drawing on the medieval story.
Her novel "Spill" 2010, was translated into many languages and awarded several prizes, most important the Swedish August Prize for best novel of the year. Her latest novel "Sidonie&Nathalie" 2017 is a story of two French refugees surviving in the Swedish country side during 1944-45. It is soon to be presented in a stage version.
She has also written a few biographies, among them an essayistic account of the life and work of Knut Hamsun.
She was one of the editors of the magazine Allt om Böcker for a number of years and has been a contributor to several other literary magazines and on a regular basis to several newapapers.
Between 2004 and 2017 she was a teacher of creative writing at Lund University.
She has served on several boards and committées in Swedish, as well as nordic literary and academic organisations.

Awards

She received the 2004 Selma Lagerlöf Prize and in 2007 she received an Honorary Doctorate in Literature at Lund University, Sweden, for her literary merits. In 2010, she received the August Prize for the novel .