How to Quiet a Vampire: A Sotie

Borislav Pekitch
Translated by Bogdan Rakic , Stephen M. Dickey
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How to Quiet a Vampire: A Sotie

Borislav Pekitch
Translated by Bogdan Rakic , Stephen M. Dickey
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Found in: FICTION, General Fiction

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Overview

432 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Apr 26, 2005
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 432
  • Publisher: Northwestern University Press
  • ISBN: 9780810117204
  • Dimensions: 5.5" W x 1.0" L x 8.5" H
BORISLAV PEKIĆ (1930–1992) was born in Podgorica, Yugoslavia. Arrested in 1948 for terrorism, armed rebellion, and espionage after the theft of a few typewriters and mimeographs, Pekić spent five years in prison, where he began to write. He worked as a screenwriter and editor of a literary journal before publishing his first novel at age thirty-five. Constant trouble with the authorities led him to emigrate to London in the early 1970s. His novels include The Houses of Belgrade (1994) and The Time of Miracles (1994), both published by Northwestern University Press. He died of cancer in 1992 in London.

STEPHEN M. DICKEY is an assistant professor of Slavic linguistics at the University of Virginia. He co-translated Meša Selimović's Death and the Dervish (Northwestern, 1996).

BOGDAN RAKIĆ is a visiting associate professor of Slavic Literature at Indiana University. He co-translated Meša Selimović's Death and the Dervish (Northwestern, 1996) and edited In a Foreign Harbor (Slavica, 2000). He is currently working on Borislav Pekić's literary biography.
"Northwestern University Press should be commended for its series Writings from an Unbound Europe, in which Pekić's novels and dozens of other first-rate works of fiction in translation from the former Communist countries of Eastern Europe have appeared and continue to appear." —New York Review of Books

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