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Maja Novak
Maja Novak
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Maja Novak (born 23 April 1960) is a Slovenian writer, translator and journalist.[1]

Key Information

Born in the industrial town of Jesenice, she grew up in Nova Gorica, a planned town on the Yugoslav-Italian border. She studied business law at the University of Ljubljana and worked as business secretary in Jordan before settling in Ljubljana, where she works as a journalist.

She started publishing short stories in the early 1990s. She has published four novels: Izza kongresa, ali umor v teritorialnih vodah (Behind the Congress, or Murder in Territorial Waters, 1993), Cimre (Roommates, 1995), Kafarnaum (Capernaum, 1998), and Mačja kuga (The Feline Plague, 2000), as well as the collection of short prose Zverinjad (Wild Beasts, 1996) and three books for children.[2]

Her novel Mačja kuga (The Feline Plague) has been praised as a literary masterpiece.[3]

She has translated authors from French (such as Gaston Leroux), Italian (such as Alessandro Baricco, Susanna Tamaro, and Giacomo Casanova), Serbian (such as Vladimir Arsenijević), and English (such as Helen Fielding, Alain de Botton, and Terry Pratchett).[4]

She writes a regular op-ed column in the weekly left-wing current affairs magazine Mladina.[5]

References

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from Grokipedia
Maja Novak is a Slovenian writer, translator, and journalist known for her contributions to contemporary Slovenian literature through novels that blend crime fiction with sharp social and political commentary. Born in the industrial town of Jesenice and raised in Nova Gorica near the Italian border, Novak moved to Ljubljana as a teenager to complete her education and later studied law while becoming a young single mother. She initially translated pulp crime novels, which influenced her own writing career as she transitioned to authoring fiction. Her works have been translated into multiple languages and recognized with nominations for prominent Slovenian literary awards, including the Kresnik and Večernica prizes. Novak received the prestigious Prešeren Foundation Award, Slovenia's national prize for the arts, in 1997 for her novel Zveri (The Beasts). Subsequent notable works include Kafarnaum (Capernaum) and Mačja kuga (The Feline Plague), which explore themes of exploitation, addiction to literature, and societal issues. She has also published other novels such as Izza kongresa, ali umor v teritorialnih vodah (1993) and Cimre (1995), as well as a collection of short prose Zverinjad (1996) and books for children. Her innovative approach has established her as a distinctive voice in modern Slovenian prose.

Early life

Birth and background

Maja Novak was born on April 23, 1960, in Jesenice, Slovenia. She is Slovenian by nationality, with her birthplace located in what was then the Socialist Republic of Slovenia within Yugoslavia.

Career

Acting career

Maja Novak made her screen debut in the 1982 Yugoslav film Deseti brat, directed by Vojko Duletič, where she played the role of the lieutenant's girlfriend. Her acting appearances are limited, with this as her primary known credit. She is better known for her literary work.

Writing career

Maja Novak ventured into screenwriting with her contribution to the Slovenian television series Hotel poldruga zvezdica in 2004, where she served as a writer for one episode. Her writing extends to film through the 2016 feature Pod gladino, where she receives a writing credit for the underlying novel Cimre (1995) that inspired the project. No further screenwriting credits are documented in available industry records. In addition to fiction, she has translated works from several languages, including authors such as Helen Fielding and Terry Pratchett, and writes a regular op-ed column for the magazine Mladina.

Filmography

Acting credits

Maja Novak's acting credits are limited, primarily consisting of a role in the film Deseti brat (1982). This reflects her occasional involvement in acting alongside her primary work as a writer.

Writing credits

Maja Novak's writing credits in film and television primarily involve writing one episode of a Slovenian television series and the adaptation of one of her novels into a feature film. She wrote one episode of the comedy television series Hotel poldruga zvezdica (2004). Her novel Cimre (1995) served as the basis for the 2016 film Pod gladino, where she received credit for the original novel upon which Barbara Zemljič based the screenplay.

Personal life

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