Hungary and Central Europe has inspired Gotsch in becoming a novelist, philosopher, political commentator, short-story writer and he continues as an essayist on matters about Europe's destiny. And much to his surprise, he continues too as a strategic thinker and fundraiser for Hungarian NGOs. His intellectual outputs include:






  • Europe into the Future presents an alternative scenario for Europe's future by
    drawing on the mediaeval Hanseatic League concept, the thoughts and writings of Walter Schubart and Roman Herzog and most importantly the cultural differences between Russians, Islamists and western modes of thinking and conflict-resolution that take him to proposals to resolve the Israeli/Palestinian impasse, the "clash of civilisations," and the realisation of horizontal economic cooperation in the high technologies for the Baltic/North and Mediterranean Seas regions.

  • Goethe's Paradigms Afire novelistic resolution of the differences between Goethe
    and Caspar David Friedrich, the great German romantic painter, in a mix of intrigue, adventure and romance with all of the complexities and nuances that Dresden and Central Europe present. A Faustian ending!

  • Shinning Moon revolves around an Eurasian art-appraiser and an Irish-American
    Commando in a mix of high-adventure and cultural nuances bringing-in German, Japanese, Buryat-Mongol and Russian imponderables to add to a bouillabaisse of intrigue.

  • Biennale about how Hungarian contemporary art and artists run-off with the prizes.

  • Anomalies, Amnesia and Burnt Bricks is Gotsch's most ambitious novelistic under-
    taking as he compresses Germany's history from 1442 to contemporary times.

  • 13 Postcards from Germany, 1945 to 1947 and The Door short-stories of Germans.

  • Magical Stones awaits Gotsch's pen.

    • John Warren Gotsch
      Ferenczi Sandor Society in Budapest that Gotsch serves as a fundraising and strategic planner consultant in the realisation of the long-awaited goal of Dr. Judit Mészáros and others to create a living and full-serving memorial to this great psychoanalyst, peer and partner of Sigmund Freud. An intellectual flowering of the Mitteleuropean tradition of big ideas and inter-disciplinary circles and connections with the literary and fine arts, pedagogy, ethnography, and the social sciences with the teachings and insights from Ferenczi Sandor.

      graduate
      JGotsch@ateliers.hu