Home / Arts and Entertainment / Hungarian Novelist László Krasznahorkai Awarded Nobel Prize for Visionary Writings
Hungarian Novelist László Krasznahorkai Awarded Nobel Prize for Visionary Writings
10 Oct
Summary
- László Krasznahorkai, a Hungarian author, won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2023
- His best-known works include "The Melancholy of Resistance" and "Herscht 07769"
- Krasznahorkai is known for his unique writing style, featuring long, complex sentences

László Krasznahorkai, a renowned Hungarian author, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2023 for his visionary and unconventional writings. Krasznahorkai, who was born in Communist Hungary in 1954, has gained international acclaim for his unique literary style, which features long, complex sentences that often span several pages.
Some of Krasznahorkai's best-known works include "The Melancholy of Resistance," a novel about the events in a small town after a circus arrives with a huge stuffed whale, and "Herscht 07769," which imagines a graffiti cleaner in Germany who writes letters to Chancellor Angela Merkel to alert her to the world's impending destruction. While "The Melancholy of Resistance" was published in Hungarian in 1989, it did not appear in English translation until 1998, and "Herscht 07769" was only published in English last year.
Krasznahorkai's unique writing style, which he has described as "absolutely original," has drawn comparisons to other acclaimed authors, such as the Norwegian writer Jon Fosse, who received the Nobel Prize in 2023. Krasznahorkai has said that he aimed to "stray far from [his] literary ancestors" and not create "some new version of Kafka or Dostoyevsky or Faulkner."
In 2015, Krasznahorkai won the Man Booker International Prize, which at the time was awarded for an author's entire body of work rather than a specific novel. The chair of that year's judging panel, Marina Warner, praised Krasznahorkai as "a visionary writer of extraordinary intensity and vocal range who captures the texture of present day existence in scenes that are terrifying, strange, appallingly comic and often shatteringly beautiful."