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Emil Gârleanu. Emil Gârleanu ( 4/5 January 1878 – 2 July 1914) was a Romanian prose writer. Born in Iași, his parents were Emanoil Gârleanu, a colonel in the Romanian Army, and his wife Pulcheria (née Antipa). He began high school in his native city in 1889, but withdrew after the first three grades.
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The elected committee consisted of Sadoveanu as president, Anghel as vice president, Gârleanu as secretary and librarian, Artur Stavri, Octavian Goga, Iosif, Chendi, Ion Minulescu, Zaharia Bârsan as members, and Lovinescu and Pavelescu as accountants. To give the society a more permanent character, it decided to organize literary meetings in ...
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At the same time, Victor Eftimiu, in collaboration with Emil Gârleanu, wrote a film script which they offered for free to a certain Georgescu. The resultant film, called Dragoste la mănăstire ( Love in a Monastery ) or Două altare ( Two Altars ) and shown only in 1914, played for just eight days.
Editura Ion Creangă (Romanian pronunciation: [ediˈtura iˈon ˈkre̯aŋɡə]) was a publishing house based in Bucharest, Romania.Founded as a state-run company under communist rule and named after the 19th-century writer Ion Creangă, it ranked high among Romanian publishers of children's literature, fantasy literature and science fiction.
In their immediate temporal setting, Brătescu-Voinești and Bassarabescu were both influential on other noted, non-Junimist, authors of short prose: Emil Gârleanu and (for a while) Mihail Sadoveanu. [46] Beyond this generation, they also influenced the novels or novellas of Lucia Mantu, [47] Marius "G. M. Vlădescu" Mircu and Cezar Petrescu. [48]
He also noted some fragments of poetic prose, using models "involuntarily stolen" from Teodoreanu, but also from Tudor Arghezi, Emil Gârleanu, and Mihail Sadoveanu. [16] According to Pavel Dan, all of Sunt studentă! ' s pieces are too self-referential, even "surfeited": "[She] writes about the fact that she is now an author. Of course, this ...