Luboš Palata (*1967) is a journalist, poet, and an occasional visual artist. He wrote short stories and poems in the 1980s and became a journalist after November 1989. He has worked for major Czech newspapers and regularly writes for the BBC, Radio Free Europe, Deutsche Welle, and Gazeta Wyborcza. He has received several Czech and international journalism awards, including the Ferdinand Peroutka Prize, which he greatly admires, especially for its recognition of literature alongside journalism. He has published two collections of poetry and gathered material for his debut novel, Elbe, during a weeks-long literary journey along the Elbe River. This novel is the fruit of over thirty years of experience as a journalist covering Central Europe and Czech-German relations as well as his diverse studies. As he says, a fulfilled life is only a few good books away.
August 2024, 256 pages
Available material: English synopsis, English sample
The Elbe is a river. The Elbe is a journey—a journey over a thousand kilometers long. A journey of dreams, a journey from Bohemia to the sea, to the ocean. The Elbe is a river of Czechs and Germans, Germans and Slavs, the West and the East. A vein connecting the Bohemian basin—Bohemia, Böhmen, Čechy—with the surrounding world by breaking through the walls of our mountains. The Elbe is a story—the story of the people around the river. More than a thousand years of stories we have lived, stories we still live today, connected with this river. Stories of grandeur, smallness, bloodshed, nobility, tragedy, sanctity, beauty, hope, despair, and dreams. The Elbe is a river of stories; this book tells those stories.