- László
Krasznahorkai (Hungarian: [ˈlaːsloː ˈkrɒsnɒhorkɒi]; born 5
January 1954) is a
Hungarian novelist and
screenwriter known for
difficult and demanding...
- Kormos. It was co-written by Tarr and his
frequent collaborator László
Krasznahorkai. It
recalls the
whipping of a
horse in the
Italian city of
Turin that...
- "Satan's Tango") is a 1985
novel by the
Hungarian writer László
Krasznahorkai. It is
Krasznahorkai's debut novel. It was
adapted into a
widely acclaimed seven-hour...
-
panel of
judges that
selected Krasznahorkai for the award,
compared his
writing to
Kafka and Beckett.
Krasznahorkai's translators,
George Szirtes and...
- Hranitzky,
based on the 1989
novel The
Melancholy of
Resistance by László
Krasznahorkai. Shot in black-and-white and
composed of thirty-nine
languidly paced...
-
screenplay was co-written by Tarr and his
frequent collaborator, László
Krasznahorkai.
Karrer (Miklós B. Székely), a
depressed man, is in love with a married...
- ellenállás melankóliája) is a 1989
novel by the
Hungarian writer László
Krasznahorkai. The
narrative is set in a
restless town
where a
mysterious circus,...
- has been
compared to that of W. G. Sebald,
Milan Kundera, and László
Krasznahorkai,
among others.
Parul Sehgal of The New York
Times said of Tokarczuk's...
-
Homecoming (Hungarian: Báró
Wenckheim hazatér) is a 2016
novel by László
Krasznahorkai.
Originally published in
Hungarian by Magvető, it was
later translated...
- with
Hungarian novelist László
Krasznahorkai for 1988's Kárhozat (****ation). A
planned adaptation of
Krasznahorkai's epic
novel Sátántangó took over...