1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Nobel Prize in literature goes to Laszlo Krasznahorkai

October 9, 2025

Krasznahorkai became the 122nd recipient of the prize, which has been given out with few exceptions since 1901. Celebrated both at home and abroad, he is famous for his dystopian novels depicting life in rural Hungary.

Hungarian writer Laszlo Krasznahorkai
Krasznahorkai has kept a low profile at his home in the Hungarian countrysideImage: Mirco Toniolo/Avalon/picture alliance

Laszlo Krasznahorkai of Hungary will receive this year's Nobel Prize in literature, the Swedish Academy announced on Thursday.

Krasznahorkai won "for his compelling and visionary oeuvre" in the "midst of apocalyptic terror" that "reaffirms the power of art," said Mats Malm, the Academy's permanent secretary.

The 71-year-old novelist and screenwriter is famous for his postmodern and sometimes dystopian portrayals of small towns in Hungary.

Several of his novels, including "Satantango" (1985) and "The Melancholy of Resistance," (1989) have been adapted into award-winning films directed by Hungarian cinema legend Bela Tarr — with whom Krasznahorkai has had a long creative partnership.

Krasznahorkai is "a great epic writer in the Central European tradition that extends through Kafka to Thomas Bernhard, and is characterized by absurdism and grotesque excess," Malm noted in his Academy presentation.

This award is considered the most prestigious honor a writer can receive in their career. Krasznahorkai has regularly been touted as a favorite to win for the past decade.

Several of Krasznahorkai's books have been adapted into filmsImage: Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images

Fame and travels

Born in Gyula in 1954, he studied literature at the University of Budapest. He first left communist Hungary on a DAAD fellowship to West Berlin in 1987, and later returned to Germany for one semester as a visiting professor at the Free University of Berlin.

After "Satantango," his debut novel, was published in 1985, he immediately became one of Hungary's most celebrated writers.

After the fall of communism, he traveled extensively in China, which led him to write his acclaimed travel memoir "Destruction and Sorrow Beneath the Heavens" (2004).

"War & War" (2006) follows an archivist who travels from the outskirts of Budapest to New York City. While working on the novel, Krasznahorkai lived in Allen Ginsberg's NYC apartment, later saying in interviews that his conversations with the acclaimed Beat poet influenced his work.

"Herscht 07769," first published in 2021 and released in English translation in 2024, has been described "as a great contemporary German novel." It portrays the country's social unrest through a series of long letters to Chancellor Angela Merkel, written in the 2010s by a man called Florian Herscht, who lives in Thuringia, an economically-struggling state of former East Germany. As the town was also the home of Johann Sebastian Bach, the composer's legacy provides the backdrop of the novel's social anarchy. The 400-page book has a single full stop.

This "flowing syntax with long, winding sentences devoid of full stops" is Krasznahorkai's signature, noted the Swedish Academy.

Despite his renown and numerous national and international prizes, including the International Booker Prize in 2015 and the US National Book Award for Translated Literature in 2019, in recent years Krasznahorkai has kept a low profile at his home in the Hungarian countryside.

The author's work combines profound bleakness with a distinctive, absurdist humor that can also be felt in his interviews. Following his Booker Prize, he was asked by The Guardian which of his books should be read first by people who didn't know his work: "If there are readers who haven't read my books, I couldn't recommend anything to read to them; instead, I'd advise them to go out, sit down somewhere, perhaps by the side of a brook, with nothing to do, nothing to think about, just remaining in silence like stones. They will eventually meet someone who has already read my books."

Laszlo Krasznahorkai is the second author writing in Hungarian to win the prize, after Imre Kertesz in 2002.

Formal ceremony in December

Unlike many other literature prizes, the Nobel Prize is given for an author's entire body of work.

Last year's winner was Han Kang of South Korea, a novelist known for her haunting portrayals of trauma and life as a woman in a society with strict gender roles. She was the first Asian woman and the first Korean to win the award.

There will be a formal ceremony held to hand over the prize in December, which comes with a check for about $1.2 million. The recipient is also expected to deliver a lecture at the event. Some past winners have been reluctant to do so — such as US songwriter Bob Dylan in 2016 — but the prize money is contingent upon giving the talk.

The selection committee has come under occasional criticism for favoring Western male authors. Of all the winners, only 18 have been women and the vast majority have written in European languages.

Edited by Sean Sinico

Elizabeth Schumacher Elizabeth Schumacher reports on gender equity, immigration, poverty and education in Germany.
Skip next section Explore more
Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW