
Horst Evers tells stories from the middle of the here and experiences, incidents and observations, in which he lovingly, with a lot of wit and a pinch of wisdom, transfigures our everyday life, our increasingly disturbing present into a comic. Stories that are far from giving even a single piece of advice, and still help – be it in health and nutrition ("Vegan-free sausage"), at the snack bar ("Coffee to run away"), at the doctor's visit ("But I hope you brought a lot of time with you") or in education ("As long as you put your table over my feet"). Evers takes advice from polite alarm systems and negotiates on the Internet with homeless, marauding algorithm gangs. Also, to his own surprise, he becomes a world-famous ballet star. Are we really getting any wiser now that we have almost uninterrupted access to all of humanity's knowledge? Or do we not come to the "Who knows everything, has no idea" with ourselves and others? Although, of course, this can only be a guess.