Hungarian writer Laszlo Krasznahorkai won Britain's Man Booker International Prize for career achievement on Tuesday, saying he hoped it would allow him to access a wider audience. PHOTO
Hungarian writer Laszlo Krasznahorkai won Britain's Man Booker
International Prize for career achievement on Tuesday, saying he hoped
it would allow him to access a wider audience.
In
his acceptance speech at a ceremony in the Victoria & Albert
Museum, the 61-year-old credited author Franz Kafka, singer Jimi Hendrix
and the city of Kyoto in Japan for inspiration.
"I
hope that with the help of this prize I will find new readers in the
English-speaking world,after receiving the award.
Asked
about the apocalyptic images in his work, he said: "Maybe I'm a writer
who writes novels for readers who need the beauty in hell."
Best
known in Germany and Hungary, Krasznahorkai is the author of Satantango
(1985), which was later made into a film, The Melancholy of Resistance
(1998) and Seiobo There Below (2008).
Previous
winners of the Man Booker International Prize, which is awarded every
two years, include US writer Philip Roth and Canada's Alice Munro.
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