Autorenbild.

George Faludy (1910–2006)

Autor von My Happy Days in Hell

59 Werke 304 Mitglieder 12 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Bildnachweis: from Lifeinlegacy.com

Werke von George Faludy

My Happy Days in Hell (1962) 118 Exemplare
Erasmus (1970) 30 Exemplare
Jegyzetek az esőerdőből (1991) 18 Exemplare
Pokolbeli napjaim után (2000) 12 Exemplare
A Pokol tornácán (2006) 12 Exemplare
Karoton (2006) 7 Exemplare
Test és lélek (1988) 7 Exemplare
100 könnyű szonett (1995) 4 Exemplare
Selected Poems 1933-1980 (1985) 4 Exemplare
Versek (1995) 4 Exemplare
A forradalom emlékezete (2006) 4 Exemplare
City of splintered gods (1966) 3 Exemplare
Kínai költészet (2000) 3 Exemplare
Erotikus Versek (1990) 2 Exemplare
200 szonett (1995) 2 Exemplare
Vitorlán kekovába (1998) 2 Exemplare
Viharos évszázad (2002) 2 Exemplare
Latin költészet (2001) 2 Exemplare
Japán költészet (2000) 2 Exemplare
Jegyzetek a kor margójára (1994) 2 Exemplare
Középkori költészet (2002) 2 Exemplare
Test és lélek 1 Exemplar
East and West 1 Exemplar
Twelve Sonnets (1981) 1 Exemplar
Pokolbeli víg napjaim (2006) 1 Exemplar
Gerendás Péter - Faludy (2006) 1 Exemplar
Limerickek (2001) 1 Exemplar
Perzsa költészet (1999) 1 Exemplar
Görög költészet (2001) 1 Exemplar
Versek 2001 1 Exemplar

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Faludy, György
Andere Namen
Faludy, George
Geburtstag
1910-09-22
Todestag
2006-09-01
Begräbnisort
Kerepesi Cemetery, Budapest, Hungary
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
Hungary
Geburtsort
Budapest, Hungary
Sterbeort
Budapest, Hungary
Wohnorte
London, England, UK
Paris, France
Budapest, Hungary
Recsk labor camp, Hungary
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Ausbildung
University of Vienna
University of Graz
University of Paris
Berufe
poet
translator
writer
Kurzbiographie
George Faludy (Hungarian: György Faludy) was born to a Jewish family in Budapest.

His parents were Erzsébet Katalin and Joachim Jenő (Chajim) Faludy. His father was a chemist who worked as a teacher in a higher technical school. After graduating from secondary school in 1928, George studied at the Universities of Vienna, Paris, and Graz. He did his military service in 1933-1934.
In 1937, he made an international name for himself when he published a Hungarian translation of the medieval ballads of Francois Villon that became extremely popular but also created controversy. A year later, the Arrow Cross Party, allied with the Nazis, seized power in Hungary and burned Faludy's books. He fled to France, and from there to North Africa and the USA. His sister Livia was among the Jews who were shot and thrown into the Danube. In 1941, Faludy joined the U.S. Army, serving for three years; after World War II ended, he returned to Hungary. In 1947, he published the poems he had written in exile.
When the Communists seized power, Faludy came under suspicion for his ties to the USA. He was arrested in 1949 and sent to forced labor for three years at the notorious prison camp at Recsk. While there, he taught classes on history, philosophy, and literature to his fellow inmates. When the Hungarian Uprising of 1956 was crushed by the Soviets, he defected with his family to London. There he published his now-famous memoir My Happy Days In Hell (1962) and edited Irodalmi Újság (Literary Journal), a Hungarian periodical.

Friends in Toronto, Canada urged Faludy to move there in 1967, and he lived in Toronto for the next 20 years. He gave lectures at Bishop University in Quebec, Toronto University, Columbia University in New York, and others. He was world renowned as a major figure of resistance against both Nazism and Communism. After the collapse of Communism, Faludy returned to Hungary, where he was well received. He married his third wife, Fanny Faludy-Kovacs, and translated poetry from around the world, with a specialty in Persian classical poets.

He was the recipient of numerous prizes, including the most prestigious literary award in Hungary, the Kossuth Prize.

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Folytatódik a kaland, felnő a főhős, de még így is alig lehet követni téren és időn át...
 
Gekennzeichnet
gjudit8 | 1 weitere Rezension | Aug 3, 2020 |
Hihetetlen időutazás a 20. századon és egész Európán keresztül. Sodró lendületű önéletrajz, remek elbeszélő mód, nagy kalandok és apró emberi rezdülések.
 
Gekennzeichnet
gjudit8 | 4 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 3, 2020 |
Hihetetlen részletek, fantasztikus meseszövés - ilyen fordulatos az élet, ha megfigyeljük és átéljük a pillanatokat.
 
Gekennzeichnet
gjudit8 | 1 weitere Rezension | Aug 3, 2020 |
Izgalmas, egzotikus világ - egy nagyon különleges ember szemszögéből fordítva/ferdítve/átlényegítve.
 
Gekennzeichnet
gjudit8 | Aug 3, 2020 |

Listen

Auszeichnungen

Dir gefällt vielleicht auch

Nahestehende Autoren

Kathleen Szasz Translator

Statistikseite

Werke
59
Mitglieder
304
Beliebtheit
#77,406
Bewertung
½ 4.3
Rezensionen
12
ISBNs
61
Sprachen
3

Diagramme & Grafiken