Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Miklós Radnóti (born Miklós Glatter, surname variants: Radnói, Radnóczi; 5 May 1909 – 4 or 9 November 1944) was a Hungarian poet, an outstanding representative of modern Hungarian lyric poetry as well as a certified secondary school teacher of Hungarian and French. He is characterised by his striving for pure genre and his revival of ...
Alfred Reynolds (born Reinhold Alfréd; 13 December 1907, Budapest – 23 December 1993, London [1]) was a writer on social and religious topics.He is known in Hungary principally as a poet and for his publication of poems by Miklós Radnóti and others in the 1930s, and in England for his leadership of the Bridge Circle, post-1945.
Miklós Lorsi (died October 1944) was a Jewish Hungarian violinist who was murdered during the Holocaust. [1] [2] The manner of his murder, and allusion to his art as a violinist formed the line "already taut, a string about to snap" in the last poem of Miklós Radnóti.
He has published twelve books of poetry in Hungarian, four in English and one in Polish, [4] and is the author of numerous critical works on Polish and Hungarian literature, the latest of which were Magnetic Poles (London, 2000), and Erdélyi Merítések ("Transylvanian Catches", Cluj-Kolozsvár, 2004).
The greatest authors and poets in the Hungarian literature of the 19th century. Hungarian literature is the body of written works primarily produced in Hungarian, [1] and may also include works written in other languages (mostly Latin), either produced by Hungarians or having topics which are closely related to Hungarian culture.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Burch has been very active in the poetry movements known as New Formalism and Neo-Romanticism. When Kevin N. Roberts founded and launched the poetry journal Romantics Quarterly, he selected five poems by Burch to lead off the premier issue (Winter 2001), and Burch had three or more poems in each of the first eight issues.
Abbreviations: children's (ch), comedy (co), drama (d), fiction (f), non-fiction (nf), poetry (p) This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .