Sebastijan Pregelj

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Sebastijan Pregelj
Sebastijan Pregelj (Leipzig Book Fair 2018)
Sebastijan Pregelj (Leipzig Book Fair 2018)
Born(1970-07-29)29 July 1970
Ljubljana, Slovenia
OccupationWriter

Sebastijan Pregelj (born 29 July 1970) is a Slovenian writer.[1] In the second half of the 1990s Sebastijan Pregelj (b.1970) called attention to himself with his collections of short stories. During the last ten years, he has undoubtedly proven his mastery of storytelling with his novels. Five of them earned him nominations for Best Novel of the Year Award (the Kresnik Award). A wide variety of readers is drawn to his novels because of their broad and rich historical background, intertwined with legends as well as present-day reality that manage to combine the magical with the spiritual and the mystical. In 2020 Pregelj won The Cankar Prize, a new literature award for the most original piece of literature from the previous year - either fiction, play, essay or poetry, for »V Elvisovi Sobi«, a novel about a generation which was growing up while the former Yugoslavia was slowly disintegrating. Sebastijan Pregelj has been featured in several anthologies in the Slovene, Slovak, German, Polish and English language. He is a member of the Slovenian Writers’ Association and Slovene PEN centre. He lives and works in Ljubljana.

Bibliography[edit]

Novels

  • Beli konjiček (2023), White Horse
  • V Elvisovi sobi (2019), In Elvis's Room (2023), Sandorf Passage, translated by Rawley Grau
  • Vdih. Izdih. (2017), Breathe In. Breathe Out.
  • Kronika pozabljanja (2014), A Chronicle of Forgetting (2019), Litterae Slovenicae, translated by Rawley Grau
  • Pod srečno zvezdo (2013), Under a Lucky Star
  • Mož, ki je jahal tigra (2010), The Man Who Rode a Tiger[2]
  • Na terasi babilonskega stolpa (2008) On the Terrace of the Tower of Babel
  • Leta milosti (2004), Years of Mercy

Collections of short stories

  • Prebujanja (2011)
  • Svinje brez biserov (2002)
  • Cirilina roža (1999)
  • Burkači, skrunilci in krivoprisežniki (1996)

Children's literature

  • A Bear and a Piggie (2023 - ), 2 books
  • Tales from the Duchy of Carniola" (2022 - ), 3 books
  • Tales from the End of Stone Age" (2016 - 2021), 7 books
  • Duh Babujan" (2014-2016), 2 books

Other

  • Literarne poti Ljubljane (2010, literary guide, co-written with Gašper Troha)
  • Ljubljana Literary Trail (2011, literary guide, co-written with Gašper Troha)[3]

Anthologies in which short stories by Pregelj have been published

  • It's Already the Morning of the Last Day, Thirty Slovenian writers. Thirty years of Slovenian independence., Sandorf Passage, 2023
  • Ljubljana Tales, a collection of Central European contemporary writing in English (2012)
  • Noc w Lublanie, an anthology of Slovene short stories in Polish (2009)
  • A Lazy Sunday Afternoon; Litterae Slovenicae vol. 112 (XLV/3)(2007)
  • Vně hranic : antologie současné slovinské krátké prózy, an anthology of contemporary Slovene short stories in Czech (2002)
  • Die Zeit der kurzen Geschichte (2001)
  • Čas kratke zgodbe (1998)

Awards[edit]

  • Večernica Award (2021): The Return, Tales from the End of Stone Age, Book 6 (Vrnitev, 6. del Zgodb s konca kamene dobe)
  • The Cankar Prize (2020): In Elvis's Room, novel

Nominations and Recognitions[edit]

  • Večernica Award, nomination, 2023: Tales from the Duchy of Carniola, Book 1
  • International Dublin Literary Award, longlist 2021: A Chronicle of Forgetting
  • Kresnik Award, finalist, 2005, 2009, 2011, 2020: Years of Mercy, On the Terrace of the Tower of Babel, The Man Who Rode a Tiger, In Elvis's Room
  • Kresnik Award, top ten, 2015: Chronicle of Forgetting
  • Desetnica Award, nomination, 2017, 2018, 2022: Tales from the End of Stone Age, Books 1, 2 & 6
  • Golden Pear Label: Tales from the End of Stone Age, Books 1 - 7; Tales from the Duchy of Carniola, Book 1

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Sebastijan Pregelj - Portal slovenskih pisateljev". 16 February 2012. Archived from the original on 16 February 2012. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  2. ^ "Read Central". 21 March 2012. Archived from the original on 21 March 2012. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  3. ^ "Ljubljana Literary trail - Ljubljana Literary trail". 30 March 2012. Archived from the original on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 19 June 2022.

External links[edit]