Bohumil Hrabal
Bohumil Hrabal (1914-1997) Was Born In Moravia And Started Writing Poems Under The Influence Of French Surrealism. In The Early 1950S He Began To Experiment With A Stream-Of-Consciousness Style, And Eventually Wrote Such Classics As "Closely Watched Trains" (Made Into An Academy Award-Winning Film Directed By Jiri Menzel), "The Death Of Mr. Baltisberger", And "Too Loud A Solitude". He Fell To His Death From The Fifth Floor Of A Prague Hospital, Apparently Trying To Feed The Pigeons.
Hrabal Bohumil:
Pirouettes on a Postage Stamp: An Interview-Novel with Questions Asked and Answers Recorded by Laszlo Szigeti
Translator: David Short
Karolinum Press , 2008
Hardcover, 189 pages
Hrabal Bohumil:
In-House Weddings
Writings From An Unbound Europe (Paperback)
Translator: Tony Liman
Northwestern University Press , 2007
Quality paperback, 171 pages
Hrabal Bohumil:
I Served the King of England
New Directions Classics
Translator: Paul Wilson
New Directions Publishing Corporation , 2007
Quality paperback, 241 pages
Hrabal Bohumil:
Total Fears: Letters to Dubenka
Translator: James Naughton
Twisted Spoon Press , 2001
Quality paperback, 208 pages
Hrabal Bohumil:
Closely Watched Trains
European Classics
Translator: Edith Pargeter, Foreword by: Josef Skvorecky
Northwestern University Press , 1995
Quality paperback, 85 pages
Hrabal Bohumil:
Too Loud a Solitude
Harvest In Translation
Translator: Michael Henry Heim
Mariner Books , 1992
Quality paperback, 112 pages





