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Nobel prize in literature 2025 live: László Krasznahorkai wins ‘for his compelling and visionary oeuvre’ | Nobel prize in literature

László Krasznahorkai wins

Ella Creamer

Ella Creamer

László Krasznahorkai has won the 2025 Nobel prize in literature.

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Who is winner László Krasznahorkai?

Emma Loffhagen

Born in Gyula, Hungary, in 1954, Krasznahorkai first made his mark with his 1985 debut novel Sátántangó, a bleak and mesmerising portrayal of a collapsing rural community. The novel would go on to win the Best Translated Book award in English nearly three decades later, in 2013.

Often described as postmodern, Krasznahorkai is known for his long, winding sentences, dystopian and melancholic themes, and the kind of relentless intensity that has led critics to compare him to Gogol, Melville and Kafka. Sátántangó was famously adapted into a seven-hour film by director Béla Tarr, with whom Krasznahorkai has had a long creative partnership.

Krasznahorkai’s career has been shaped by travel as much as by language. He first left Communist Hungary in 1987, spending a year in West Berlin for a fellowship, and later drew inspiration from East Asia – particularly Mongolia and China – for works such as The Prisoner of Urga, and Destruction and Sorrow Beneath the Heavens.

While working on War and War, he travelled widely across Europe and lived for a time in Allen Ginsberg’s New York apartment, describing the legendary Beat poet’s support as crucial to completing the novel.

His admirers are formidable: Susan Sontag called him “the contemporary Hungarian master of apocalypse,” while WG Sebald praised the universality of his vision. In 2015, Krasznahorkai became the first Hungarian writer to win the Man Booker International prize.

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