Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Gyula Krúdy

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Nationality
  
Hungarian

Died
  
12 May 1933, Óbuda

Occupation
  
Writer, journalist

Movies
  
Szindbád

Gyula Krúdy 100 VES A NYUGAT 19082008 KRDY GYULA

Born
  
21 October 1878 (
1878-10-21
)

Spouse
  
Zsuzsanna Rózsa (m. 1919–1933), Bella Spiegler (m. 1899–1919)

Children
  
Ilona Krúdy, Zsuzsa Krudy, Mária Krúdy, Gyula Krúdy

Books
  
Sunflower, The Adventures of Sindbad, Life Is A Dream, Ladies Day, The Adventures of Sinbad

Similar
  
Dezső Kosztolányi, Zsigmond Móricz, Sándor Márai, Frigyes Karinthy, Erno Szep

Gyula Krúdy (21 October 1878 – 12 May 1933) was a Hungarian writer and journalist.

Biography

Gyula Krúdy Knyvek kzssg Moly

Gyula Krúdy was born in Nyíregyháza, Austria-Hungary. His father was a lawyer and his mother was a maid working for the Krúdy family. His parents did not marry until Gyula was 17 years old. In his teens, Krúdy published newspaper pieces and began writing short stories. Although his father wanted him to become a lawyer, Krúdy worked as an editor at provincial newspapers (Debrecen, Nagyvárad) for several years, then moved to Budapest in 1896. He was disinherited, but supported his wife (also a writer) and three children through the publication of short stories, along with novels that were almost always serialized in daily papers and periodicals.

Sinbad's Youth, published in 1911, proved a success, and Krúdy used the character, a man who shared the name of the hero of the Arabian Nights, many times throughout his career. Another alter ego, Kazmer Rezeda, is the hero of half a dozen novels, including The Crimson Coach (1913), English translation by Paul Tabori published in 1965. Krúdy's last collection of stories, Life Is a Dream, has also appeared in English translation (Penguin Books, 2010).

Gyula Krúdy Kosztolnyi Dezs Krdy Gyula

Krúdy's novels about Budapest were popular during the First World War but afterward he was often broke due to excessive drinking and gambling. His first marriage fell apart. His second marriage produced one daughter, Zsuzsa, who later edited several volumes of her father's work. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, his health declined and his readership dwindled.

Gyula Krúdy httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

In the years after his death, his works were largely forgotten until 1940, when Hungarian novelist Sándor Márai published Sinbad Comes Home, a fictionalized account of Krúdy's last days. This book's success brought Krúdy's works back to the Hungarian public. The edition of his collected works published by Szépirodalmi (Budapest, 1978–89) ran to twenty volumes. There is a permanent exhibit on Krúdy's life at the Hungarian Museum of Commerce and Tourism, which is located in a building in Óbuda in which he lived for the last three years of his life.

Gyula Krúdy Krdy Gyula emlkezete

Gyula Krúdy Gyula Krdy 39Sindbad39s Prayer39 From The Adventures of Sindbad

Gyula Krúdy Krdy Gyula Kulturlis Enciklopdia

Gyula Krúdy Gyula Krdy Wikipedia

References

Gyula Krúdy Wikipedia


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