Marina Šur Puhlovski

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Marina Šur Puhlovski is a Croatian writer. She was born and raised in Zagreb, and studied comparative literature and philosophy at university. She writes in a wide range of genres, including short stories, novels, travelogues and essays. Her debut novel Trojan Horse appeared in 1991. Her recent novel Wild Woman received critical acclaim and was translated into English by the prolific translator Christina Pribichevich Zorić.[1]

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  1. ^ Bio

MARINA ŠUR PUHLOVSKI


Marina Šur Puhlovski was born in Zagreb on September 20, 1948. She finished grammar school in Zagreb and got her B.A. in Comparative Literature and Philosophy at the University of Zagreb, Faculty of Philosophy.

           During her youth, she was engaged in journalism, and, for a while, in literary criticism, after which she decided to commit herself to literary writing.

           She lives and works in Zagreb. She's married, and has a daughter.

           Marina Šur Puhlovski began writing in her early childhood, when she was writing poetry. Later, during her studies, she focused on prose. The first story, "Under the Table", was published in 1974 in the Journal of the Croatian Writers' Republika. Since then he has published stories in numerous literary magazines and newspapers, but the first book, a novel Trojanska kobila (The Trojan Mare) was published in 1991 - just before the outbreak of the war in former Yugoslavia. By 1991, however, she had nine books written, which she failed to publish, for various reasons (not political); it was more about Šur Puhlovski adamantly refusing to fit into the 'postmodernist' generation, then active, close-knit and praised. She openly distanced herself from that circle and pursued her own literary 'voice,' not recognized at the time. "You're not going to publish anything for a long time now," the reviewer of "Trojan Mare" said to her, and so it was like that, indeed. War broke out, everything else was on stand-by.

           During the war, however, she still published stories in magazines, and Ništarija (A Good-for-Nothing Man), a novel she had written in her youth, was published in two parts in 'Forum' (Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts). It was only in 1996, when she was 48, that her second collection of short stories - written when she was 30 years old - A Rabbit in the Attic was published. In the following twenty years, she has been able to publish all the books 'from her drawer,' publishing one, and even two a year, together with those she was writing alongside - a total of twenty titles. Her novels were always longlisted or shortlisted for the national awards. Finally, her latest novel, Divljakuša (A Wild Woman) won the publishing house VBZ's prize for the best unpublished novel of the year, and was subsequently published in 2018, becoming a literary bestseller.

           Her interests are diverse, so, apart from six novels and six story collections, she has written and published a collection of songs in prose, two travel books about the Adriatic, a collection of essays on the meaning of literature and the difference between art and sophisticated kitsch, a collection of mini-essays, and several books of auto-fictional mixed genres (travel, journal, aphorisms).

In 2015 she won the Zvane Črnja Award for her book Književnost me iznevjerila: (Eseji s margine)..[1]


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