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ArtsMagnesia Litera Awards announced

16-05-2003 | Pavla Horáková

Book of the Year - Stories from the Long Century Last weekend, the winners of the Magnesia Litera book awards for the best Czech books published in 2002 were announced in Prague.  More

Czech BooksIva Pekarkova: a Czech writer at home on both sides of the Atlantic

04-05-2003 | David Vaughan, Pavla Jonssonová

Pavla Jonssonova (left) and Iva Pekarkova Welcome to "Czech Books", our new fortnightly series devoted to Czech writing and writers. In a series of interviews over the next few weeks the writer and musician Pavla Jonssonova, well known from the popular band Zuby Nehty, will be talking to a number of Czechs writing today. She starts with one of the most interesting contemporary Czech novelists, Iva Pekarkova, whose books are filled with energy, eroticism and heroines who are not afraid to take their fate into their own hands. Her first novel appeared in English as "Truck Stop Rainbows" in 1992, and is about a young woman who seeks freedom on the open road in the unlikely setting of communist Czechoslovakia. And Gin, the heroine of her more recent novel "Gimme the Money" is just as fearless, in a story inspired by the author's own experiences as a New York cab driver in the 1990s. Readers in English will soon have the chance to get to know another Czech heroine or anti-heroine, when Iva's novel "The Scars" appears later this year. The action heroine is an untypical feature of Czech writing, and this was what interested Pavla Jonssonova, when she caught up with Iva a few days ago in a Prague café.  More

ArtsRoma artists release new book and CD

02-05-2003 | Dita Asiedu

Agnesa Horvatova Today's edition is devoted to artists from the country's Roma community. We'll be looking at a new book that's hit the shelves and a recently released CD of the Roma band Terne Chave:  More

WitnessFrom Kundera in Texas to Czech History in New York City

29-04-2003 | Dean Vuletic

Bradley Abrams is an associate professor of history at Columbia University in New York City, where he specialises in the history of the Czech lands. He received his bachelors degree from the University of Texas and his masters and doctoral degrees from Stanford University. It was at Stanford University that he studied the history of East Europe, and here he describes how a book by Milan Kundera in a Texas bookstore sparked his initial interest in Czech history.  More

Current AffairsFerdinand Peroutka: Journalist of Czech Democracy

18-04-2003 | Tracy Burns

Ferdinand Peroutka Twenty-five years ago, on Sunday April 20, Czech journalist and creative writer Ferdinand Peroutka, affectionately called "Mr. Czechoslovakia" in America, died in exile in New York. A fierce fighter for democratic values in Czechoslovak society, Peroutka didn't let the Nazis or Communists tell him what to think or what to write, and he did pay dearly for not succumbing to political pressures. I spoke with journalist and political commentator Vaclav Zak, who believes that journalists today have something to learn from Peroutka.  More

Czechs in HistoryBittersweet prose - a look at the life and work of writer Ota Pavel

16-04-2003 | Jan Velinger

Ota Pavel 'How I Came to Know Fish' - for years I glimpsed this elegant volume of short stories in Prague's English-language bookstores, at times wondering over its greenish cover featuring a fish on a hook. I wondered blankly over the name of its author, without, I admit, inquiring further. Ota Pavel. The name, though known to most Czechs, said nothing to me then, at most I had an inkling the author had been a sports journalist for Czech Radio in the 1950s. Then I caught a glimpse of his photo somewhere - Ota Pavel, writer - the author in his youth, a black and white picture of a dashing figure with a slanted fedora, staring thoughtfully into the lens. I caught a glimpse and when I heard of a film by the director Karel Kachyna based on the author's work, equally suggestive, I began to wonder about his life even more. The story of Ota Pavel, with its twists and final haunting downfall - and 'How I Came to Know Fish' - both looked at in today's Czechs in History.  More

Current AffairsNew book reveals unusual facts about ten presidents

14-04-2003 | Dean Vuletic

Author Libor Budinsky (on the right), photo: CTK Did you know that eight of the ten presidents of Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic spent time in prison? Or that Czechoslovakia's first president, Tomas Garrigue Masaryk, rode horses until the age of eighty three, and one of his favourites was a bay horse called Hektor? A recently released book titled "Ten Presidents" gives us these and other unusual insights into the lives of the presidents of Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic.  More

Current AffairsInterpretations of reality: Yann Martel's Life of Pi

11-04-2003 | Jan Velinger

Yann Martel, photo: CTK One of the many interesting authors invited to this year's Prague Writer's Festival was Yann Martel, a Canadian novelist who made headlines world-wide by winning the prestigious Man Booker prize for his novel Life of Pi. Jan Velinger, who attended the festival, met the writer to discuss his fascinating book.  More

Current AffairsPrague Writers' Festival hits peak with readings by Jeffrey Eugenides, Irvine Welsh

10-04-2003 | Jan Velinger

Michael March and Jeffrey Eugenides, photo: CTK This year's annual Prague Writers' Festival has come to its final day and already it is obvious it will go down as one of the most successful literary events in the Czech Republic in 2003. Appearances by world-renowned writers at Theatre Minor in Prague, have been heavily attended to hear from famous, as well as lesser known, authors. The festival reached probably its highest peak two nights ago: Tuesday saw appearances by fresh Pulitzer prize winner Jeffrey Eugenides, who read from Middlesex, and Irvine Welsh, who read from his provocative first novel Trainspotting.  More

Current AffairsPrague isn't just the names Havel and Kafka: Author Peter Demetz returns to his birthplace

09-04-2003 | Tracy Burns

From left to right: Peter Demetz, Marketa Goetz-Stankiewiczova, Miroslav Hornicek, Prague 2000, photo: CTK During the Prague Writers' Festival's Tuesday panel discussion titled "The Great Dream of Heaven," Prague-born Peter Demetz described the American way of life as a sort of mythical entity that is much more than the golden arches of the McDonald's restaurants which stand out like eyesores throughout the American landscape. A resident of the USA since 1949, he said he considers America to be a sort of heaven because a person doesn't need a past, doesn't have to remember. Just what does the author of the extensive history Prague In Black and Gold have to say about his birthplace and his current visit to the Czech capital? I spoke with him after Tuesday's event.  More

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