Vladimir Arsenijević: Difference between revisions
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'''Vladimir Arsenijević''' (b. 1965 in [[Pula]], [[Croatia]], [[SFR Yugoslavia]]) is an awarded and internationally acclaimed [[Serbia]]n writer, translator, editor and publicist. He won the 1994 [[NIN (magazine)|NIN]]-award thus becoming the youngest ever recipient of this prestigious prize with his first novel [[In the Hold (U potpalublju)]]<ref>[[Ken Kalfus]], [http://www.nytimes.com/1996/09/22/books/balkan-sorrows.html "Balkan Sorrows"], ''The New York Times'', 1996</ref>. This was the very first debut book ever rewarded with this prize. This anti-war book was soon translated into 20 languages and placed Arsenijevic almost instantly among the most translated Serbian writers ever. Since then, Arsenijevic published four other novels. He is a well known editor who formed and developed the RENDE publishing house, and worked in it as its editor in chief from its foundation until 2007. Currently, he runs a [[Belgrade]] subsection of a distinguished Croatian publishing house VBZ. He lives and works in Belgrade. |
'''Vladimir Arsenijević''' (b. 1965 in [[Pula]], [[Croatia]], [[SFR Yugoslavia]]) is an awarded and internationally acclaimed [[Serbia]]n writer, translator, editor and publicist. He won the 1994 [[NIN (magazine)|NIN]]-award thus becoming the youngest ever recipient of this prestigious prize with his first novel [[In the Hold (U potpalublju)]]<ref>[[Ken Kalfus]], [http://www.nytimes.com/1996/09/22/books/balkan-sorrows.html "Balkan Sorrows"], ''The New York Times'', 1996</ref>. This was the very first debut book ever rewarded with this prize. This anti-war book was soon translated into 20 languages and placed Arsenijevic almost instantly among the most translated Serbian writers ever. Since then, Arsenijevic published four other novels. He is a well known editor who formed and developed the RENDE publishing house, and worked in it as its editor in chief from its foundation until 2007. Currently, he runs a [[Belgrade]] subsection of a distinguished Croatian publishing house VBZ. He lives and works in Belgrade. |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 17:03, 7 December 2010
Vladimir Arsenijević (b. 1965 in Pula, Croatia, SFR Yugoslavia) is an awarded and internationally acclaimed Serbian writer, translator, editor and publicist. He won the 1994 NIN-award[1] thus becoming the youngest ever recipient of this prestigious prize with his first novel In the Hold (U potpalublju)[2]. This was the very first debut book ever rewarded with this prize. This anti-war book was soon translated into 20 languages and placed Arsenijevic almost instantly among the most translated Serbian writers ever. Since then, Arsenijevic published four other novels. He is a well known editor who formed and developed the RENDE publishing house, and worked in it as its editor in chief from its foundation until 2007. Currently, he runs a Belgrade subsection of a distinguished Croatian publishing house VBZ. He lives and works in Belgrade.
References
- ^ Slobodan Vladušić, "Neorealism in Serbian Prose of the 1990s:Its Development and Transformations", 2006
- ^ Ken Kalfus, "Balkan Sorrows", The New York Times, 1996