I was born December 21, 1917 in Cologne, on
the Rhine, the son of the sculptor and cabinet-maker, Viktor
Böll, and his wife, Maria, née Hermanns. Between 1924
and 1928 I attended elementary school in Köln Raderthal, and
from 1928 to 1937, the state-run Kaiser-Wilhelm classical
secondary school in Cologne. In spring 1937 I began as an
apprentice bookseller (publishers, retail trade, antiquarian) for
the Matth. Lempertz company in Bonn. I left this apprenticeship
in spring 1938, started my first attempts to write, gave private
lessons, read a great deal. During autumn 1938 I was conscripted
into the national labour service, and released in spring 1939
after completing a six-month term of compulsory service. Because
the completion of labour service was a precondition for
permission to study at the university, I was able to begin my
studies of Germanistics and Classical Philology during the summer
term of 1939. Late in the summer of 1939 I was conscripted into
the German Army shortly before the outbreak of the war. I took
part in the Second World War; in autumn 1940, briefly in France,
from 1941 to 1942 (after a severe case of typhus), in the
replacement units in Germany, from early 1942 until summer 1943,
along the English Channel coast in France, between summer 1943
and autumn 1944, in the Soviet Union, Romania and Hungary, from
spring 1945 on, for a few weeks in western Germany, where I was
taken prisoner by the Americans, and interned until October 1945
in a camp in France, and then for a few weeks in October/November
1945, in an English camp in Belgium.
As early as December 1945, I accompanied my wife and a few
relatives in their return from evacuation in the countryside to
Cologne, where over the years we settled down in a destroyed
house. I started to write again, while simultaneously working on
repairing the destroyed house, I started my studies again -
merely formally, because proof of occupation was necessary to
obtain a food rationing card. From 1946 to 1949 I published short
stories, and in 1949 my first book, a novella, called Der Zug
war pünktlich, was published. After a first invitation
to a meeting of the "Gruppe 47" in 1951, I met many German
postwar writers with whom I afterwards became friends. I owe
particular thanks, and hereby give them, to Hans Werner Richter,
Alfred Andersch and many others that I cannot name in detail.
Even if there occurred brief or permanent controversies during,
or after, these meetings, the Gruppe 47 liberated many German
authoresses and authors out of their isolation in a destroyed and
fragmented postwar Germany. In 1942 I married Annemarie Cech, who
has been irreplaceable, not only as my wife and companion, and
not only as fellow experiencer and fellow sufferer in the fascist
drama during the Nazi reign in Germany, but also for her critical
awareness for language.
Our first child, Christoph, died in October 1945. Our sons
Raimund, René and Vincent were born in 1947, 1948 and 1950
in the rubble of Cologne and grew up there.
Between 1950 and 1951 I worked as a temporary employee in the
Cologne Bureau of Statistics. From summer 1951 on I have lived as
a freelance writer with a fixed postal address in Cologne, but
with a continually shifting place of work.
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1968-1980, Editor-in-Charge Tore Frängsmyr, Editor Sture Allén, World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, 1993
This autobiography/biography was first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Heinrich Böll died on July 16, 1985.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1972