Juraj Kuniak (born 2 July 1955) is a Slovak poet and writer. He was born in Košice, Slovakia.

Juraj Kuniak

Works

edit

Poetry

edit
  • 1983 – Premietanie na viečka
  • 1994 – Kúsok svetového priestoru
  • 1995 – Blúdivý nerv
  • 2001 – Cor cordi
  • 2008 – Čiara horizontu
  • 2008 – Zápisník lyrického spravodajcu / Notebook of a Lyrical Correspondent
  • 2012 – Lamium album (co-author: Ján Kudlička)
  • 2015 – Za mestom
  • 2016 – Rosa mystica (co-author: Ján Kudlička)

Co-author of poetry

edit

Collected edition of poetry

edit
  • 2004 – Skalná ruža – a triptych includes Premietanie na viečka, Blúdivý nerv and Kúsok svetového priestoru
  • 2019 – Amonit – selected poems 2008-2016

Translations of poetry

edit
  • 2013 – Walt WhitmanSong of Myself – translation into Slovak language: Spev o mne
  • 2019 – Walt WhitmanSong of Myself – translation into Slovak language: Spev o mne (Second, revised edition)
  • 2019 – Robert HassTime and Materials – translation into Slovak language: Čas a materiály

Prose

edit
  • 1991 – Pán Černovský
  • 1993 – Súkromný skanzen – Etudy o etniku
  • 2002 – Nadmorská výška 23 rokov
  • 2003 – Púť k sebe
  • 2008 – Mystérium krajiny / Mystery of Landscape
  • 2013 – Dhaulágirí – Biela hora (co-author: photographer Marián Kováč)
  • 2018 – Nepálsky diptych: Dhaulágirí – Biela hora & Makalu – Čierny obor (co-author: photographer Marián Kováč)

Books in other languages

edit
  • 1989 – Podívej se na básničku, Czech
  • 2004 – Nadmořská výška 23 let, Czech
  • 2004 – Mister Cernovsky, English
  • 2005 – Man in the wind, English
  • 2006 – A Bit of the World's Space, English
  • 2007 – Cor cordi, English
  • 2008 – The line of the horizon, Hungarian, German, Czech, Polish, Finnish, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, English, Flemish, Dutch, French, Italian, Castilian, Portuguese, Spanish, Japanese, Chinese, Mongolian, Russian, Arabic, Hebrew, Greek, Macedonian, Ukrainian, Slovenian
  • 2008 – Notebook of a Lyrical Correspondent, English
  • 2010 – Nervus vagus, Czech
  • 2012 – Lamium album, Polish, German, English
  • 2013 – Dhaulagiri - Vitt berg, Swedish
  • 2016 – Rosa mystica, Polish, German, English
  • 2019 – Amonit, Belarusian
  • 2019 – Amonit, Serbian

References

edit