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Josef Nesvadba (June 19, 1926 Prague, Czechoslovakia – April 26, 2005 Prague) was a Czech science fiction writer, the best known from the 1960es generation and translated also in the West.
[edit] BiographyNesvadba had a degree in psychiatry, he was a pioneer of group psychotherapy in Czechoslovakia. He originally translated poetry from English and wrote several theatrical plays as a student at the turn of 1940s-1950s; towards the end of the decade he started to write short stories, his interest being satirical science fiction. As befitting his background, psychiatry is often a theme in his SF. These tend to revolve around stories of human weakness, divided personalities, and so forth. However the tendency was often toward satire and irony. As with much Czech fiction the humor tends to be dark. In "Vampires Ltd" cars run on blood. In Tomorrow I'll Wake up and Scald Myself with Tea film he scripted, issues of causality and Hitler crop up. He also directed satirical barbs at the Communist government. He had little faith in the grandiose dreams of twentieth-century Communism, but overall agreed with a Marxist analysis of things, which he accordingly maintained even after the unraveling of Communist Party rule in Czechoslovakia.[1] Starting in the 1970s he began to move away from science fiction. From a commercial perspective this did not work well, but in retrospect was likely inevitable. This is because his main interests are slightly divergent from Western views of science fiction. Some of his stories were bases to movies (e.g. Death of Tarzan, The Half-wit of Xeenemunde, Vampires, Ltd, Tomorrow I'll wake up and scald myself with tea), he also worked on several TV and radio serials. [edit] Works(partial list) [edit] Early theatrical plays
[edit] Story collections
Later selections were Výpravy opačným směrem (Expeditions in the Opposite Direction, 1976) and almost complete Einsteinův mozek a jiné povídky (Einstein's Brain and Other Stories, 1987). The English translations were Vampires Ltd. (Prague 1964) and In the Footsteps of the Abominable Snowman (UK 1970; in US 1971 as The Lost Face). [edit] Novels
[edit] References
[edit] See also[edit] External links
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