Where to Start with Jenny Erpenbeck
Jenny Erpenbeck is one of the most important German novelists of her generation, a writer who treats history not as backdrop but as the thing that enters your house and rearranges the furniture. Born in East Berlin in 1967, she grew up in a literary family: her mother was a translator, her father a physicist, and her grandparents had been prominent figures in German intellectual life. She trained as a bookbinder and stage director before turning to fiction. Her novels are short, precisely constructed, and devastating in their ability to compress decades of upheaval into the lives of ordinary people. In 2024 she became the first German-language author to win the International Booker Prize, for her novel Kairos.
Start here
Go, Went, Gone
Jenny Erpenbeck · 287 pages · 2015 · Moderate
Themes: refugees, displacement, German history, empathy, belonging
Richard is a recently retired classics professor in Berlin. His days have lost their structure, and time just passes. Then he discovers a group of African refugees occupying a public square, men trapped in bureaucratic limbo, waiting for decisions that may never come. He begins to visit them, listen to their stories, and slowly realizes that his own life of comfortable routine has been its own kind of waiting.
Why Start Here
Erpenbeck’s earlier novels are brilliant but demanding, compressed narratives that span decades in a hundred pages. Go, Went, Gone is her most expansive and accessible work, the book where her gifts for historical compression meet a present-tense crisis in a way that feels both intimate and urgent. Richard’s gradual awakening is the reader’s own: you begin at a safe distance and end up implicated.
The novel’s title comes from the German verb conjugation gehen, ging, gegangen, which the refugees practice in their language classes. It is also a quiet statement about what Europe has done with its inconvenient guests: gone, gone, gone. Erpenbeck, who grew up in East Germany and watched one state dissolve overnight, understands that belonging is never as solid as it looks.
What to Expect
A novel that moves between a professor’s quiet Berlin apartment and the chaotic world of asylum bureaucracy. The prose is calm and exact, building its emotional force through accumulation rather than dramatic set pieces. Erpenbeck intersperses Richard’s story with the refugees’ own accounts of crossing deserts and seas, told in their words. The effect is devastating precisely because the novel refuses to sensationalize. At just under three hundred pages, it is a book you can finish in a few days that will change how you see the city around you.