- Jan Čep
Jan Čep (1902 - 1974) was a Czech writer and translator.
He was born in 1902 in the village of
Myslechovice nearOlomouc to a family of peasants. After completing his studies at the Gymnasium in Litovel, from 1922 to 1926 he studied Czech, English and French linguistics atPrague University . In 1926, he joinedJosef Florian 's Christian community inStará Říše and worked in its publishing house as a translator. But after he was seduced by Florian's elder sister, he returned toPrague and worked as a translator for the publishing housesMelantrich and Symposion. After theGerman occupation of Czechoslovakia , he returned to his native village and led a solitary life out of politics and public life. He only corresponded with his best friend, the poetJan Zahradníček (their correspondence was published in the 1990s as a book) and made visits to a Dominican cloister in Olomouc to see his other friend, a monk, theologian and literature critic namedSilvestr Maria Braito . After the end of WWII he returned to Prague and worked as an editor in theVyšehrad publishing house .After the communist takeover in 1948, Jan fled into exile and lived in
France . His friends that stayed, such as Jan Zahradníček, were subjected to cruel persecution. The poet Zahradníček was sentenced to 13 years of prison for his "anti-socialistic thinking" and died a few weeks after being released from prison in the 1960s.In exile, Jan Čep lived in
Paris (1948-1951) and inMunich (1951-1954) where he became a commentator in the Czech section ofRadio Free Europe . In 1954, he returned to Paris, married, and became an essayist and free journalist. He died in exile in 1974 in Paris.Books
*Dvojí domov (1926, Double Being), short stories
*Zeměžluč (1931, Centaury), short stories
*Letnice (1932, Pentecost), short stories
*Děravý plášť (1934, Perforated Cloak), short stories
*Hranice stínu (1935, Border of Shade), novel
*Modrá a zlatá (1938, Blue and Gold), short stories
*Polní tráva (1946, Field Grass)
*Rozptýlené paprsky (1946), essays
*Cikáni (1953, Gypsies), novel published in Munich exile
*O lidský svět (1953, Human World), essays published in Rome
*Samomluvy (1959) essays, published in Lund
*Sestra úzkost (1975, My Sister Fear), memoirs/essay, published in Rome
*Etudy pro paní J. (1986, Etudes for Mrs. J.), novel published posthumously in MunichExternal links
* [http://zivotopisyonline.cz/jan-cep.php Biography] (cz)
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