Interesting facts revealed about one of the greatest Hungarian authors

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The Door, The Fawn, Katalin Street… all the titles may sound familiar. They were written by one of the greatest Hungarian writers, Magda Szabó, who not only was Hungary’s beloved authoress, but she also gained international success. On the occasion of her 100th birthday, Szeretlekmagyarország.hu has collected some interesting facts you may have not known.
Magda Szabó in numbers

She was a very productive and versatile author. She wrote 13 novels, 10 youth and children’s books, 10 plays and volumes of drama, and 3 books about poetry. 42 of her works have been translated and 11 of her works have been filmed. She won 22 Hungarian and international prizes.

Magda Szabó as a poet

She began her career as a poet. Her first poetry book was published in 1947 with the title Lamb, and the last one in 2005 including one of her most famous poems, Back Towards Man.

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photo: Facebook/Szabó Magda

Magda Szabó and friends

After WWII, she moved to Budapest where she made friends with well-known writers and poets like Ágnes Nemes Nagy, János Pilinszky, Iván Mándy, Géza Ottlik and Sándor Weöres. Special friendship tied her to the writer Ágnes Nemes Nagy: they read each other’s works and they counted on the other’s opinion. By that time, Magda Szabó had become a widely recognized poet.

Magda Szabó and the Baumgartner Prize

Miss Szabó is the last and also the only winner of the Baumgartner Prize who could hold it only for half a day. She had been nominated before for the prize, so she could be very glad when her name appeared on the list of the winners in 1949. However, her happiness did not last long: the same day, she was told that the prize was going to be withdrawn, accordingly to the instructions of the Minister of Cultural Affairs. Thereafter she was not allowed to publish anything until 1958.

Magda Szabó and love

Miss Szabó’s and her husband’s love was legendary, pure, and lasted until death. The couple moved to a house in Júlia Street in Budapest, and later they bought a smaller flat, too. The lady used to get over to the flat every afternoon, waiting for her husband to knock on the door. When he entered, Miss Szabó invited him to have coffee with her and they always played that they had just got to known each other. After her husband died, the writer never got married again.

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