One of the 20th century’s greatest writers, the British novelist Graham Greene visited Romania in 1962. Stay tuned for some of his impressions from his trip and to learn more about its background and political implications with the film critic, academic and Graham Greene translator Andrei Gorzo.
The author of dozens of other popular books, such as The Power and the Glory, The Quiet American,Our Man in Havana, The End of the Affair and Brighton Rock, to name just a few, he had been invited to visit the country by the Romanian Writers Union and was to spend two weeks here.
Greene was shown around the capital, Bucharest, and taken on trips out into the countryside, around Transylvania and to the Black Sea coast, where he met local writers and spoke to the local press. He also gave a very short interview to Radio Bucharest, as the international service of Radio Romania was known back then.
Andrei Gorzo, who translated three of Graham Greene’sbooks into Romanian, offered an insight into the British writer’s popularity behind the Iron Curtain, including in Romania.
At the end of June 1964, Bucharest would host the executive committee of the World Federation of Scientific Workers, a non-governmental organisation...