Foreign Rights

Dear colleagues,

Welcome to the Foreign Rights page of Carl Hanser Verlag. Please see below for information on the authors and titles to which we control world rights. You can also download our latest Foreign Rights Catalogues. Please do not hesitate to contact us if you are interested in translation rights or if you wish to receive a reading copy.

We look forward to hearing from you.

Kind regards,
Your Foreign Rights Team
Friederike Barakat, Anne Brans, Chiara Gardella, Claudia Horzella & Annette Lechner

About Hanser Literaturverlage Contact Us Rights Lists Search


About Hanser Literaturverlage

Ranging from contemporary authors to international literary classics, and featuring children’s and young adults’ books as well as an informative, thought-provoking non-fiction programme, Hanser’s list is both stimulating and inviting.

The concept
Carl Hanser founded the publishing house in 1928 with an extraordinary idea: he united two different divisions – literary and specialist titles – under one roof to ensure the company’s independence. The fact that Hanser is still one of the few publishers of its size to have remained in family ownership testifies to the founder’s prescience at only twenty-seven years of age.
This decision ensured the publisher’s survival from 1933 on. During the period of the Nazi dictatorship, Hanser no longer published literary publications, but only specialist books and magazines, as its specialist division was not jeopardised by the political situation. After the war, Carl Hanser was one of the first publishers to receive a license from the American occupying authorities.

Post-war period
After 1945, the literary division of the publishing house was able to develop its profile. It quickly made a name for itself with classic editions of German literature from Goethe to Fontane, alongside which today stand successful new translations of foreign literature from Melville to Tolstoy and Flaubert. Hanser initially took a conservative approach to contemporary literature, but the literary magazine Akzente, founded in 1953 by Walter Höllerer and Hans Bender, opened it up to younger voices and international writing.

The path ahead
Hanser retains its independence and distinctiveness by concentrating on its strengths: it builds close relationships to its authors and develops ideas for each and every book. To make sure it has a high profile in a broad range of fields, the publishing house has built up a network of holdings and imprints. In 1960, Hanser was one of the founding partners of the paperback imprint dtv, and in 1993, the Hanser Kinder- und Jugendbuch (Children’s and Young Adults’ Books) was launched. Hanser acquired Zsolnay Verlag in 1996, and Deuticke Verlag in 2004, both Vienna-based publishers. Then its programme expanded once more in 2012 when it set up the subsidiary Hanser Berlin. The latest addition to the Hanser group was made in 2019 with the founding of hanserblau.

Our core business: German-language literature
German-language authors remain the cornerstone of our publishing house: Herta Müller, Botho Strauss, Arno Geiger, Wilhelm Genazino, Michael Köhlmeier, Rafik Schami, Barbara Honigmann, Alex Capus, Navid Kermani, Thomas Lehr, Norbert Gstrein and many others represent our diverse and impressive range of contemporary literature. Our most recent acclaimed publications include titles by Karen Köhler, Monika Helfer, Abbas Khider, Tilman Rammstedt, Fatma Aydemir, Theresia Enzensberger and Anja Kampmann.

Nobel laureates and major international names
Hanser has more Nobel Prize laureates for Literature than any other German publisher. Ivo Andric was our first author to receive the most acclaimed literary prize in 1961, followed in 1981 by Elias Canetti, the first German-language author at Hanser to have won it. In recent years, the publishing house has welcomed Orhan Pamuk (2006), Herta Müller (2009), Tomas Tranströmer (2011), Mo Yan (2012), Patrick Modiano (2014) and Svetlana Alexievich (2015), among others, to the ranks of its Nobel-prize winners.
In the meantime, international names such as Jorge Luis Borges, Primo Levi, Italo Calvino, Susan Sontag, Roberto Bolaño, Philip Roth, Per Olov Enquist, Milan Kundera, Claudio Magris, Michael Ondaatje, Jostein Gaarder, Ljudmila Ulitzkaja and Margriet de Moor count almost as classics. Yasmina Reza, David Grossman, T.C. Boyle, Peter Hoeg, Colson Whitehead and many others spearhead Hanser’s current programme and will lead it into the future. When Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose was published in 1982, a Hanser publication appeared for the first time on the German bestseller list, which has since been a regular achievement.

Poetry remains indispensable
Poetry marks the beginning of literature. It is an integral part of the Hanser programme, which features poetry by Günter Kunert and Lars Gustafsson, Emily Dickinson and Raoul Schrott, Christoph Meckel, John Burnside, Adam Zagajewski and Ocean Vuong. Anthologies such as the modern translations of medieval German poetry collected in Unmögliche Liebe (Impossible Love) reflect the contemporary poetry scene, and numerous prizes and events render visible a genre in which language reinvents itself.

Non-fiction for a broad readership
Hanser explores all kinds of subjects throughout the world with its well-founded contemporary non-fiction programme. This includes works by the biographers Rüdiger Safranski and Karin Wieland, political analyses by Timothy Garton Ash, historical accounts by Karl Schlögel and Philip Blom, philosophical reflections by Peter Bieri and Emanuele Coccia, sociological observations by Heinz Bude, books that provoke discussion by Barbara Bleisch and scientific findings by Julia Shaw. History, politics, current debates, society, cultural studies, nature and knowledge are the focal points of the Hanser’s non-fiction range.


Contact Us

Hanser | Hanser Berlin | hanserblau

Friederike Barakat
GB/USA, Spain, Portugal, South America Vilshofener Straße 10
81679 München
Germany
phone: +49-89-99830-509
friederike.barakat@hanser.de

Hanser | Hanser Berlin | hanserblau

Chiara Gardella
France, Italy, Netherlands, Scandinavia, Israel, Arab World Vilshofener Straße 10
81679 München
Germany
phone: +49-89-99830-530
chiara.gardella@hanser.de

Hanser | Hanser Berlin | hanserblau

Claudia Horzella_Portrait

Claudia Horzella
Baltic States, Central East, East and South East Europe, Greece, Turkey, Asia Vilshofener Straße 10
81679 München
Germany
phone: +49-89-99830-532
claudia.horzella@hanser.de

Hanser Children’s books

Anne Brans
Worldwide Vilshofener Straße 10
81679 München
Germany
phone: +49-89-99830-519
anne.brans@hanser.de

Zsolnay

Annette Lechner
Worldwide Prinz-Eugen-Straße 30
1040 Wien
Austria
phone: +43 1 5057661-12
annette.lechner@zsolnay.at

Rights Lists

Fiction Spring 2023

NON-FICTION Spring 2023

CHILDREN'S BOOKS Spring 2023

Fiction Autumn 2022

Fiction Autumn 2022

Non-Fiction Autumn 2022

Non-Fiction Autumn 2022

Children's Books Autumn 2022

Childrens-book-2022

Search:


The Seasons of Eternity

Karl-Markus Gauß

The years between his 60th and 65th birthdays provide the frame for Karl-Markus Gauß’ journals. But this »sensitive chronicler of daily life« (Neue Zürcher Zeitung) entices us into following him back into history, and into taking a look at ...

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The Never-Ending Trek

Karl-Markus Gauß

Leipzig Book Award for European Understanding 2022

The book by Karl-Markus Gauß that you’ve always wanted to read. He reports on a Muslim sommelier in the Albanian town of Berat and recounts the jaw-dropping story of Central ...

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An Adventurous Journey Through my Room

Karl-Markus Gauß

Everyday things, everyday life, stories set in past eras: an expedition into the realm of objects by Karl-Markus Gauß.

Many seek adventure in far-off places. But Karl-Markus Gauß, a much-travelled cartographer of Europe’s outer ...

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Twenty Levs or Death

Karl-Markus Gauß

Karl-Markus Gauß is travelling again. In the Republic of Moldova, Europe’s poorest country, he becomes infected with »Moldovan longing« – a sympathy for the country and its people. And in well-known and remote Bulgarian regions alike, he ...

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The Everyday World

Karl-Markus Gauß

Everyday life is full of wonders and impositions. The world: a place yet to be discovered. Karl-Markus Gauß’ latest book is a lesson in astonishment.

The spectrum spanned by this rebuttal of the zeitgeist covers the two years ...

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The First Thing I Set Eyes on

Karl-Markus Gauß

Seeing, hearing, smelling, feeling. Karl-Markus Gauß describes the earliest sensory experiences of a small boy in the mid-twentieth century, and at the same time paints a portrait of the author as a sheltered child.

The attention of ...

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Fame in the Afternoon

Karl-Markus Gauß

In a series of observations that transcend time, national boundaries and genre, Gauß ruminates on life and death.
He describes a girl in Britain who turns her impending death into a public spectacle and looks into the latest fad in the ...

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In the Forests of the Metropoles

Karl-Markus Gauß

In his new book, Karl-Markus Gauß tries out different genres and invents a new one in the process: In the Forests of the Metropoles is a travelogue on a grand scale that takes us all the way from Burgundy to Transylvania, and from a small ...

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The Laughing Losers of Roana

Karl-Markus Gauß

Karl-Markus Gauß is famed for his beguiling travelogues. This time he meets proud young Assyrians in Sweden, persecuted as Christians in the Orient and forced to flee their homeland, who are now establishing themselves in a new country but ...

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Too Soon, Too Late

Karl-Markus Gauß

Karl-Markus Gauß casts his net wide. He writes of the Iraq War and the illusions of his relatives who emigrated from the Wojwodina to America; he reports on the profitability of sperm banks and ruminates on age-old human issues; he follows the ...

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