Miodrag Bulatović

Miodrag Bulatović

Miodrag Bulatović (Serbian Cyrillic: Миодраг Булатовић; born 1930, Okladi, Bijelo Polje, Zeta Banovina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia - died 1991, Igalo, Montenegro, SFR Yugoslavia) was a Montenegrin Serb[1] novelist and playwright. "He was known for his fierce Serbian nationalism, which earned him the enmity of other ethnic groups in Yugoslavia, and he was an official of Serbia's Socialist Party."[2]

Writings

Bulatović began in 1956 with a book of short stories, Djavoli dolaze ("The Devils Are Coming", translated as Stop the Danube), for which he received the Serbian Writers Union Award. His novel The Red Rooster Flies Heavenwards, set in his homeland of northeastern Montenegro, was translated into more than twenty foreign languages. He then stopped publishing for a time, to protest interference in his work.

His next novel, Hero on a Donkey, "A dark hot nightmare of a war novel...",[3] was first published abroad and only four years later (1967) in Yugoslavia.

In 1975, Bulatović won the NIN Award for novel of the year for People with Four Fingers, an insight into the émigré's life. The Fifth Finger was a sequel to that book. His last novel was Gullo Gullo, which brought together various themes from his previous books.

Bibliography

References

  1. Vikend: Neradni dani
  2. "Miodrag Bulatovic; Novelist, 68 (Obituaries)". The New York Times (Reuters). The New York Times Company. 19 March 1991. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  3. "A Hero On A Donkey". https://www.kirkusreviews.com. Kirkus Media LLC. Retrieved 1 May 2015. External link in |website= (help)


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