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Morris Renek

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Morris Renek was born in New York City March 12, 1925.

Yurii Ihorovych Andrukhovych (Ukrainian: Юрій Ігорович Андрухович) is a Ukrainian prose writer, poet, essayist, and translator.

Biography

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Andrukhovych was born March 13, 1960 in Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine. In 1985 he co-founded the Bu-Ba-Bu poetic group , which stands for бурлеск, балаган, буфонада--'burlesque, side-show, buffoonery' together with Oleksandr Irvanets and Viktor Neborak. Yuri Andrukhovych is the father of Sofia Andrukhovych, who has also become a writer.

Political views

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Andrukhovych writes in Ukrainian and is known for his pro-Ukrainian and pro-European views, however he is rarely considered a Ukrainian nationalist, a charge he fiercely denies himself. In his interviews, he said that he respected both the Ukrainian and Russian languages and claims that his opponents do not understand that the very survival of the Ukrainian language is threatened. During the 2004 presidential elections in Ukraine he signed, together with eleven other writers, an open letter in which he called Sovietic Russian culture: "language of pop music and criminal slang". for the bilingual Zerkalo Nedeli he translates his essays from Ukrainian into Russian himself, every issue of which is published in both languages.

Literary work

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To date, Andrukhovych has published five novels, four poetry collections, a cycle of short stories, and two volumes of essays, as well as literary translations from English, German, Polish, and Russian. His essays regularly appear in Zerkalo nedeli (Mirror Weekly), an influential trilingual newspaper published in Russian and Ukrainian with excerpts published in an online English edition. Some of his writings for example, The Moscoviad and Perverzion were carried out in a distinct postmodern style. A list of some of his major works includes:

Awards and honors

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For his literary writings and activity as a public intellectual, Andrukhovych has been awarded numerous national and international prizes, including the Herder Prize (2001), the Erich Maria Remarque Peace Prize (2005), the Leipzig Book Fair Prize for European Understanding (2006), the Angelus Prize (2006), the Hannah Arendt Prize (2014).[1]

He is a member of the editorial board of Ukrainian periodicals Krytyka and Potyah 76.

References

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  1. ^ "Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria Alyokhina and Yuri Andrukhovych receive the Hannah-Arendt-Prize 2014". Heinrich Böll Foundation. 24 July 2014. Retrieved July 25, 2014.
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DEFAULTSORT:Andrukhovych, Yuri Category:1960 births Category:Living people Category:People from Ivano-Frankivsk Category:Ukrainian poets Category:Postmodern writers Category:Ukrainian translators Category:Ukrainian non-fiction writers a critically admired New York novelist who wrote comic tales about historical criminals and modern urban life but never achieved the commercial success many thought he deserved, died on May 10 in Manhattan. He was 88.

He died after suffering cardiac arrest while walking in the Flatiron district, his wife, the former Ethel Leventhal, said. He lived in Pound Ridge, N.Y.

Mr. Renek’s novels, published between the 1960s and ’80s, conveyed social messages in hard-boiled prose. His characters were often motivated by powerful ambition or desperation to escape society’s constraints.

The critic John Leonard, writing in The New York Times, called Mr. Renek’s second novel, “Siam Miami” (1969), “comic, profound and elegantly written.” The book described a beautiful pop singer’s brushes with the sleazy side of show business on the path to stardom.

Mr. Renek’s third novel, “Heck” (1971), was about a nobody who decides to rob a bank in his old Brooklyn neighborhood, Williamsburg, so that he can have a sense of accomplishment.

“His enthusiasm is boundless, his imagination unpredictable and diverting,” the novelist John Deck wrote in The New York Times Book Review. “There is a wealth of talent here that is perhaps spent too lavishly. That it is a real and original talent there can be no doubt.”

Though Mr. Renek’s books had only limited commercial success, he refused to compromise his writing for more gainful employment; he quit a lucrative job writing for CBS News to devote more time to his novels.

In his book “Namedropping: Mostly Literary Memoirs,” the novelist and critic Richard Elman called Mr. Renek “the single most dedicated novelist I ever encountered.”