USA & Canada (New Directions), UK & Commonwealth (MacLehose Press), Spanish world rights (Acantilado), Catalan rights (Mès llibres), Chinese simplex rights (China CITIC Press / Sight), Chinese complex rights (Locus), Russia (Ad Marginem), Portuguese rights (Elsinor), Arabic world rights (Kalima), France (Ypsilon Éditeur), Italy (Nottetempo), Netherlands (Meridiaan), Sweden (Pequod Press), Norway (Forlaget Press), Finland (Osuuskunta Poesia), Korea (Mujintree), Japan (Kawade), Thailand (Gamme Magie Editions), Indonesia (Yayasan Pustaka Obor), Poland (Ha!Art), Hungary (Corvina), Romania (Trei), Croatia (Mizantrop), Serbia (Dereta), Turkey (CAN), Greece (Antipodes), Mongolia (Monsudar)
Domestic Rights Sales: German Audiobook (DAV)
Winner of numerous international awards and longlisted for the 2021 International Booker Prize
Longlisted for the Angelus Award 2023 (Poland)
Warwick Prize for Women in Translation (UK) 2021
Best Translation Award (Japan) 2021
Openbook Award (Taiwan) 2021
Helen & Kurt Wolff Translator's Prize 2021 to Jackie Smith for her English translation of An Inventory of Losses (USA)
Premio Strega Europeo (Italy) 2020
Longlisted for the National Book Award Translated Literature (USA) 2021
Longlisted for the 2021 International Booker Prize (UK)
Longlisted for the Europese Literatuurprijs (The Netherlands) 2021
Longlisted for the 2021 Jan Michalski Prize for Literature (Switzerland)
»There are no gains without corresponding losses, no losses without corresponding gains.« Agnes Heller
»Western man’s inclination to value what is extinct more than what still exists seems to be one of its more rationally almost incomprehensible qualities, for there could be no other way to explain the strange fascination with the Tasmanian wolf.« Die Neue Brehm-Bücherei natural history series
World history is full of things...
»There are no gains without corresponding losses, no losses without corresponding gains.« Agnes Heller
»Western man’s inclination to value what is extinct more than what still exists seems to be one of its more rationally almost incomprehensible qualities, for there could be no other way to explain the strange fascination with the Tasmanian wolf.« Die Neue Brehm-Bücherei natural history series
World history is full of things that have gone astray – willfully destroyed or mislaid over the course of time. In her new book, Judith Schalansky dedicates herself to that which the lost leaves behind: dying echoes and disappearing steps, whispers and legends, apostrophes and phantom pains. Beginning with objects from nature and art like an incinerated painting of Caspar David Friedrich’s, an extinct species of tiger, a Roman baroque villa, the holy writings of a vanished religion or a sunken island in the Pacific, she presents a panorama of the long lost and disappeared, a panorama which traces the world’s blank spaces together with those within natural and cultural history while opening up areas of knowledge where delivery has failed. The protagonists of these short stories are outsiders: a bizarre old man hoarding the knowledge of humankind in his garden in Tessin, a lunar researcher from Bohemia who gives up all earthly curiosity for a position in the Archive of the Moon, an aged Greta Garbo who dreams of appearing on the silver screen as Dorian Gray, Judith Schalansky’s own father who left the family before she could even form a memory of him. These texts speak about beginnings and endings – and at the same time are an autobiographical trip into a country that no longer exists: childhood, the GDR of the 1980s.
Each of the twelve stories in this collection sketches its own world through a subject-specific language, a world in which the boundaries between presence and absence have disappeared as much as have those between fiction, memoir and essay, while simultaneously questioning the reliability of our individual and collective memories as well as future instruments of transmission. Moreover, every one of the 16-page stories begins and ends with a black page, which, as in a photofit picture, suggests more than depicts the lost. As such, the collection proves itself to be a document of the power of print, the book a more efficacious and long-lasting medium of transmission than any other.
After her Atlas of Remote Islands, in this, her Inventory of Certain Losses, Judith Schalansky once again sounds the spaces between reality and imagination, truth and myth, fact and fiction. The result is a lively evocation of the lost and the remote, which suggests that perhaps the difference between presence and absence is only marginal as long as memory still exists – that, and a literature which reveals just how close preservation and destruction, loss and creation, really are.
Judith Schalansky, born in Greifswald in 1980, lives in Berlin where she works as a writer, editor and book designer. Her work, which includes the internationally successful bestsellers Atlas der abgelegenen Inseln and the novel Der Hals der Giraffe, has been translated into more than twenty languages and has won several prizes. Verzeichnis einiger Verluste received the Premio Strega Internazionale 2020, is longlisted for a National Book Award for Translated Literature in 2021 and was longlisted for the 2021 International Booker Prize and the Europese Literatuurprijs 2021.
Judith Schalansky, born in Greifswald in 1980, lives in Berlin where she works as a writer, editor and book designer. Her work, which includes the...

English world rights (Bloomsbury), Spanish world rights (Random House Mondadori), Chinese simplex rights (People's Literature Publishing House), Chinese complex rights (Locus), Russia (Text), Portuguese rights (Elsinore), France (Actes Sud), Italy (nottetempo), Netherlands (Meridiaan), Denmark (Vandkunsten), Sweden (Pequod Press), Norway (Press), Finland (Tammi), Korea (Galmuri), Japan (Kawade), Poland (Ha!Art), Czech Republic (Paseka), Hungary (Typotex), Bulgaria (Geia-Libris), Romania (Allfa), Estonia (Tänapäev), Bosnia (Imprimatur), Turkey (Ayrinti)
Previously published in the respective language / territory; rights available again: Brazilian Portuguese rights (Objetiva), Macedonia (Blesok)
Domestic Rights Sales: German Audiobook (DAV), German Book Club (Büchergilde Gutenberg), German Radio Play (SWR), German Stage Adaptations (Schauspiel Frankfurt - also performed at various other German Theatres; Maxim Gorki Theatre Berlin)