Borb on 1 January 1942, Anna Duden was raised in Berlin and then in Ilsenburg. In 1953, she escaped to West Germany with her mother and two siblings. She graduated from high school in Oldenburg and went off to study German at the Free University of Berlin.[1][4]
Career
In 1972, Duden was employed by the Verlag Klaus Wagenbach publishing house in Berlin. The following year, together with some of her colleagues, she founded the Rotbuch Verlag where she worked for a number of years. From 1978, she was a freelance writer in London and Berlin.[4] In addition to her poetry books, she published articles and essays in journals and anthologies.[5]
Her reputation as an innovative writer began with the publication of her collection of stories Übergang (1985) and was followed in 1985 by her novel Das Jadasschaf depicting the anguish aroused by recent German history. She extends her visions of horror and laments in the poetry of Steinschlag (1993) and Hingegend (1999).[6][pageneeded]