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Current Affairs'Harry Potter' and 'Lord of the Rings' top list of Czechs' favorite books

05-10-2004 | Brian Kenety

And the winner is: "Harry Potter," and not by a nose. In a nationwide survey of nearly 100,000 people, Czech readers have named the English author J.K. Rowling as having penned their favorite book.  More

Czech BooksProfessor Peter Steiner - finding water in the Deserts of Bohemia

08-08-2004 | Bernie Higgins, David Vaughan

In this week's programme we talk to Professor Peter Steiner, who wrote a fascinating book about Czech literature. He was born in Prague and left in 1968 to go to America. He taught at Michigan and Harvard before settling at the University of Pennsylvania. He teaches in the department of Slavic languages and literature.  More

Current AffairsEnjoying a Czech beer at the Svejk pub in Stockholm

01-07-2004 | Ian Willoughby

Krogen Soldaten Svejk pub, photo: Author The Czech pub Krogen Soldaten Svejk - which of course translates as the Good Soldier Svejk in English - is located in the lively district of Soldermalm, south of Stockholm's city centre. The manager of the "hospoda" is Jari Ounasvuori, a Finnish man married to the daughter of the Czech couple who set the pub up in the mid 1970s. When I stopped by one evening, I asked him what Czech beers they had at the Krogen Soldaten Svejk.  More

MagazineMagazine

04-10-2003 | Daniela Lazarová

A Saudi Arabian princess gets her jewels stolen in Karlovy Vary -right across the street from the town's police headquarters, a noted Czech composer shares the secret of his success: he can hear mushrooms sing. And the Prague 2 magistrate organizes a public execution: a pickpocket gets his hand chopped off as a warning to others. Find out more in this week's magazine with Daniela Lazarova.  More

Czechs in HistoryThe Good Soldier Svejk - a literary character, a legend

02-04-2003 | Jan Velinger

The Good Soldier Svejk He was a man who never lived, yet who went further in defining the Czechs in the 20th century than perhaps anyone else: the most famous of Czech literary characters, the Good Soldier Svejk. Created by the true bohemian - as well as anarchist - writer Jaroslav Hasek, Svejk is often impenetrable but ultimately irreverent beneath a simple child-like smile most often mistaken for foolishness. He makes a mockery of his "betters" within the Austro-Hungarian Empire, ultimately seeing through the hypocrisies of his day. Almost unintentionally he sabotages a regime already coming apart at the seams under the fiasco of the Great War. His greatest accomplishment: to survive in the face of adversity and absurd situations, which continues to be his legacy for many Czechs...  More

Current AffairsFans of 'The Good Soldier Svejk' salute genius of author Jaroslav Hasek

06-01-2003 | Jan Velinger

The Good Soldier Svejk, by Josef Lada The famous Czech author of 'The Good Soldier Svejk and his Fortunes in the World War', Jaroslav Hasek, died 80 years ago at the early age of 39 - and it was to his genius that a special commemorative gathering was held last week in Lipnice nad Sazavou in south-east Bohemia, where Hasek spent the last few years of his life, and wrote much of his famous opus.  More

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