Hubert Krains

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File:Hubert Krains - Berne -1907.JPG

Hubert Krains (1862–1934) was a Belgian author who wrote two novels, five short-story collections and a collection of essays. His fiction focuses on peasant life, employs a simple and direct style, and is predominantly tragic in tone.[1]

Life

Born in Brussels, Krains became a member of the Académie royale de langue et de littérature françaises de Belgique. He wrote essays and became famous with Portraits d'écrivains belges (1930), a collection of essays on Belgian writers. Krains died in a train accident. A prize is named in his honour.[citation needed]

Works

  • "Le pain noir" – short story anthologized in À la gloire de la Belgique, edited by Jan Greshoff (1915), pp. 237–241. (Available on dbnl.org)

Honours

References

  1. Benjamin M. Woodbridge (1948). High Lights in Recent Belgian Letters and Art. Books Abroad 22 (3): 240–244 JSTOR 40087549
  2. Royal order of 21 July 1924.