Stephen Vizinczey

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Stephen Vizinczey

Stephen Vizinczey (born May 12, 1933 in Kaloz , Hungary ) is a Hungarian-British-Canadian writer.

Stephen Vizinczey grew up in Hungary. His father was murdered by the National Socialists. After the failure of the Hungarian people's uprising , he fled to Montreal in 1956 and learned the English language. He was a screenwriter for the National Film Board of Canada , then ran Exchange magazine and joined CBS / Radio Canada . The author now lives in London .

Works

  • In Praise of Older Women. Atlantic Monthly , Trident Press 1966; again Hamilton, 1985
    • Women to pick. 1967
    • Praise from the experienced women . Translated by Hans Hermann. Klett-Cotta, 1988; again Fischer TB, 1992
    • How I learned to love women . Translated by Carina von Enzenberg . SchirmerGraf, 2004
  • To Innocent Millionaire. McClelland & Stewart, 1983
    • The innocent millionaire. Translated from Michael Felsen. Klett-Cotta, 1987; again Fischer TB, 1991
  • The rules of chaos.
  • Truth and lies in Literature. Hamish Hamilton, 1986
  • Wishes , 2001
  • The man with the magic touch. 2014
  • If only . Surrey The Happy Few, 2016 ISBN 978-0-9935837-1-1

Web links