About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 28. Chapters: Gyorgy Dalos, Kalman Kalocsay, Tivadar Soros, Lajos Kassak, Laszlo Krasznahorkai, Adam Nadasdy, George Tabori, Lajos Zilahy, Sandor Weores, Laszlo L. L rincz, Karl Gottlieb von Windisch, Bela Balazs, Andras Gerevich, August Silberstein, Mihaly Babits, Kalman Mikszath, Val Biro, Lajos Doczi, Martin Esslin, Lajos Hevesi, Sandor Brody, Lajos Biro, Karoly Kisfaludy, Zsigmond Moricz, Ida Jenbach, Tibor Dery, Jozsef Kossics, Emil Haraszti, Zvi Yair, Sebestyen Tinodi Lantos, Gyorgy Gabori, Petri Mor, Gergely Csiky, Ernest Vajda, Sandor Hunyady, Rudolf Lothar, Gyorgy Karoly, Ervin Lazar, Klara Marik, Ferenc Santa, Gustav Kadelburg, Ladislaus Vajda, Eduard Kabos, Ferenc Herczeg, Alexander Roda Roda, Adam Bodor, Zoltan Pal Dienes, Agota Bozai, Adolf Dux, Sandor Boloni Farkas, Eva Foldes, Janos Wimpffen, Giorgio Pressburger, Janos Rozsas, Julia Szekely, Zsolt Harsanyi, Ilona Heged s, Ferenc Barnas, Mihaly Tancsics, Gardonyi, Ferenc Mez, Martin Bergame, Sandor Kisfaludy, Gyorgy Bessenyei, Jozsef Fabchich, Ern Pattantyus-Abraham, Eva Janikovszky, Ivan Mandy, Tamas Sipos, Arthur Holitscher, Andras Biro, Bela Illes, Ern Osvat, Emil Makai, Gabor Dayka, Lajos Posa. Excerpt: Lajos Kassak (March 21, 1887 - July 22, 1967) was a Hungarian poet, novelist, painter, essayist, editor, theoretician of the avant-garde and occasional translator, was the father of many modernisms. He was also the first genuine working-class writer in Hungarian literature. Self-taught, it was within the socialist movement that he became a writer and artist. Although he cannot be fully identified with any of the avantgarde movements, his main influences were expressionism, futurism and later dadaism. Born as a son of an apotechary assistant father and a laundress mother, in Ersekujvar in present day Slovakia. Despite his parents wanted him to attend higher edu...