
“Everyone has a novel inside them” – an interview with the Péterfy couple
In the picturesque Umbrian town of Todi, located in the region of Umbria, we conducted a joint interview with the writer couple Éva Péterfy-Novák and

In the picturesque Umbrian town of Todi, located in the region of Umbria, we conducted a joint interview with the writer couple Éva Péterfy-Novák and

Gergely Péterfy’s novel was not an easy read. I honestly say, I was curious to see where the threads of the plot would lead by

I have read few novels in the past five years where every page is gripping, where something essential happens in every paragraph—that is, where there

Péterfy’s novels have been met with particularly high expectations since the success of ‘Kitömött barbár’ in 2014, but now the time for skepticism has arrived

This year, the novel ‘The Bullet That Killed Pushkin’ was shortlisted for the Libri Literary Awards. The book is a captivating story of a seemingly

Péterfy Gergely’s novel The Bullet That Killed Pushkin was one of last year’s most outstanding contemporary literary works, a finalist for the Libri Literary Prize.

Péterfy Gergely has traversed many periods and locations of the past. He evidently enjoys his familiarity with history. It was therefore high time for him

Olga. I have read in several places that Gergely Péterfy’s new novel, The Bullet That Killed Pushkin (Budapest, Kalligram, 2019), is an excellent work, and

Péterfy sees the third edition as the result of numerous circumstances coming together. The Book Week release clearly boosts popularity, but we cannot overlook the

Herkulesvár. This fictional settlement, located in the Danube Bend and intriguing even to historians, already carries in its name the essence of a novel interwoven