Hungarian master of absurdist excess László Krasznahorkai wins Nobel
literature prize
[October 10, 2025]
STOCKHOLM (AP) — Hungarian writer László Krasznahorkai, whose surreal
and anarchic novels combine a bleak world view with mordant humor, won
the Nobel Prize in literature Thursday for work the judges said upholds
the power of art in the midst of “apocalyptic terror.”
The Nobel judges said the 71-year-old author, whose novels sometimes
consist of just one long sentence, is “a great epic writer” whose work
“is characterized by absurdism and grotesque excess.”
He’s the first Nobel literature winner from Hungary since Imre Kertesz
in 2002 and joins a list of laureates that includes Ernest Hemingway,
Toni Morrison and Kazuo Ishiguro.
“I am calm and very nervous,” Krasznahorkai told Radio Sweden after
getting news of the prize, which comes with an award of more than $1
million. “This is the first day in my life when I got a Nobel Prize. I
don't know what's coming in the future.”
The work that won the Nobel Prize in literature
The American writer and critic Susan Sontag once described Krasznahorkai
as the “contemporary master of the Apocalypse.” His work has echoes of
other European writers who explored the absurd tragicomedy of existence,
including Franz Kafka and Samuel Beckett.
Zsuzsanna Varga, a Hungarian literature expert at the University of
Glasgow, said Krasznahorkai’s novels probe the “utter hopelessness” of
human existence, while also being “incredibly funny.”
Krasznahorkai’s near-endless sentences made his work the “Hotel
California” of literature — once readers get into it, “you can never
leave,” she said.

Varga suggested readers new to Krasznahorkai’s work start with “Satantango,”
his 1985 debut, which centered around the few remaining residents of a
dying collective farm and set the tone for what was to follow.
Krasznahorkai has since written more than 20 books, including “The
Melancholy of Resistance,” a surreal, disturbing tale involving a
traveling circus and a stuffed whale, and “Baron Wenckheim’s
Homecoming,” the sprawling saga of a gambling-addicted aristocrat.
“Herscht 07769,” from 2021, is set in a German town riven with unrest.
Written as a series of letters to then-German Chancellor Angela Merkel,
it has just one period in its 400 pages.
Several works, including “Satantango,” and “The Melancholy of
Resistance” were turned into films by Hungarian director Béla Tarr.
Krasznahorkai also wrote several books inspired by his travels to China
and Japan, including “A Mountain to the North, a Lake to the South,
Paths to the West, a River to the East,” published in Hungarian in 2003.
How Krasznahorkai came to win
Krasznahorkai had been on the Nobel radar for some time, committee
member Steve Sem-Sandberg said, calling his literary output “almost half
a century of pure excellence.”
The writer was born in the southeastern Hungarian city of Gyula, near
the border with Romania, and studied law at universities in Szeged and
Budapest before shifting his focus to literature.
Varga, the academic, said Krasznahorkai developed a cult following among
young Hungarians during the twilight of Communism in the 1980s, when
“authors were pretty much like pop stars.”

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Hungary's Laszlo Krasznahorkai poses for photographers in London,
Tuesday, May 19, 2015. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham, File)
 János Szegő, Krasznahorkai’s editor
at the Budapest-based Magvető publishing house, said that the
author’s works deal with “life on the periphery,” and are interested
in “the techniques of power.”
“All the populist tendencies of our time can also be found in his
novels — from barbarism to the manipulation of the masses,” Szegő
said.
Krasznahorkai has been a critic of autocratic Hungarian Prime
Minister Viktor Orbán, especially his government's lack of support
for Ukraine after the Russian invasion.
In an interview with Swedish newspaper Svenska Dagbladet earlier
this year, Krasznahorkai expressed criticism both of Orbán’s
political system and the nationalism present in Hungarian society.
“There is no hope left in Hungary today and it is not only because
of the Orbán regime,” he told the paper. “The problem is not only
political, but also social.”
Orbán nonetheless congratulated the writer in a Facebook post,
saying: “The pride of Hungary, the first Nobel Prize winner from
Gyula, László Krasznahorkai.”
How Krasznahorkai and others reacted
Krasznahorkai received the 2015 Man Booker International Prize for
his body of work and the National Book Award for Translated
Literature in the U.S. in 2019 for “Baron Wenckheim’s Homecoming.”
He said none of his career was planned.
“I wanted at first to write only one book. And I didn’t want to be a
writer,” he told Swedish radio, but rereading his first novel he
discovered it wasn’t perfect.
“I started to write another one because I wanted to correct ‘Satantango,’”
he said, and later “I tried to write a new book to correct the first
two. ... My life is a permanent correction.”
The literature prize has been awarded by the Nobel committee of the
Swedish Academy 117 times to a total of 121 winners. Last year's
winner was South Korean author Han Kang. The 2023 winner was
Norwegian writer Jon Fosse, whose work includes a seven-book epic
made up of a single sentence.

The literature prize is the fourth to be announced this week,
following the 2025 Nobels in medicine, physics and chemistry.
The winner of the Nobel Peace Prize will be announced Friday. The
final Nobel, the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, will be
announced Monday.
Nobel Prize award ceremonies are held on Dec. 10, the anniversary of
Alfred Nobel’s death in 1896. Nobel was a wealthy Swedish
industrialist and the inventor of dynamite who founded the prizes.
Each prize carries an award of 11 million Swedish kronor (nearly
$1.2 million). Winners also receive an 18-carat gold medal and a
diploma.
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