|
Shmuel Yosef Agnon
(1888-1970) |
||||
| Recipient of the 1966 Nobel Prize for Literature, Shmuel Yosef Agnon was born in Galicia in 1888. He immigrated to Jaffa in 1908, but spent 1913 through 1924 in Germany. In 1924 he returned to Jerusalem, where he lived until his death in 1970. A prolific novelist and short-story writer from an early age, Agnon received numerous literary awards, including the Israel Prize on two occasions. | ||||
![]() |
Called "a man of unquestionable genius" and "one of the great storytellers of our time," S.Y. Agnon is among the most effusively praised and widely translated Hebrew authors. His unique style and language have influenced the writing of subsequent generations of Hebrew authors. Much of his writing attempts to recapture the lives and traditions of a former time, but his stories are never a simple act of preservation. Agnon's tales deal with the most important psychological and philosophical problems of his generation. "Via realistic and surrealistic modes," writes the New York Times, "Agnon has transmuted in his many words the tensions inherent in modern man's loss of innocence, and his spiritual turmoil when removed from home, homeland and faith." An observant Jew throughout most of his life, he was able to capture "the hopelessness and spiritual desolation" of a world standing on the threshold of a new age. Extolled for his "peculiar tenderness and beauty," for his "comic mastery" and for the "richness and depth" of his writing, it is S.Y. Agnon's contribution to the renewal of the language that has been seminal for all subsequent Hebrew writing. | |||
| Books
Published in Hebrew Novels: The Bridal Canopy, Schocken, 1932 A Simple Story, Schocken, 1935 A Guest for the Night, Schocken, 1939 Only Yesterday, Schocken, 1946 Shira, Schocken, 1971 In Mr. Lublin's Store, Schocken, 1974 Agnon published 24 volumes of novels, novellas and short stories. The Collected Works of S.Y. Agnon was published by Schocken in eight volumes between 1953-62, updated with the 11 works that appeared posthumously. |
![]() |
|||