Wang Huo | |
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Native name | 王火 |
Born | Wang Hongpu (王洪溥) (1924-07-01) 1 July 1924 (age 100) Shanghai, China |
Occupation | Novelist |
Language | Chinese |
Alma mater | Fudan University |
Period | 1943–present |
Genre | Novel, screenplay, prose |
Notable works | War and People |
Notable awards | 4th Mao Dun Literature Prize 1997 War and People |
Wang Huo (Chinese: 王火; pinyin: Wāng Huǒ; born 1 July 1924) is a Chinese novelist and screenwriter. Wang was a member of the 5th, 6th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
Biography
Wang was born in Shanghai in July 1924, with his ancestral home in Rudong County, Jiangsu.
Wang started to publish works in 1943.
Wang joined the National Literature and Art Association in 1948. At the same year, he graduated from Fudan University. After graduation, Wang worked in Shanghai Federation of Trade Unions. He is a member of the Chinese Communist Party.
After the founding of the Communist State, Wang worked in Laodong Publishing House (劳动出版社) as an editor.
In 1953, Wang was transferred to All-China Federation of Trade Unions, he served as the chief editor of Chinese Worker (中国工人).
In 1961, Wang taught at a school in Linyi, Shandong.
Wang joined the China Writers Association in 1979.
In 1983, Wang was appointed an associate editor of Sichuan People's Publishing House (四川人民出版社) and the chief editor of Sichuan Literature and Art Publishing House (四川文艺出版社).
Wang retired in 1987.
Works
Novellas
- Right of Privacy (隐私权)
Long-gestating novels
- War and People (战争和人)
- The Foreign Eighth Route Army (外国八路)
- The Biography of Jie Zhenguo (血染春秋——节振国传奇)
- Firelight in the Heavy Fog (浓雾中的火光)
- Xueji (雪祭)
- The Biography of Firefly (流萤传奇)
- Awakening to Truth (禅悟)
Short stories
- Meteor (流星)
- The General Strike (二七大罢工)
Proses and poems
- Xichuangzhu (西窗烛)
Screenplay
- The Moon and the Sea (明月天涯)
- The Foreign Eighth Route Army (外国八路)
Awards
- War and People – 4th Mao Dun Literature Prize (1997)
References
- ^ Wang Huo (2005). 战争和人 (in Chinese). Beijing: People's Literature Publishing House. ISBN 9787020048892.
- ^ Wang Huo (1999). 霹雳三年 (in Chinese). Beijing: People's Literature Publishing House. ISBN 9787020028825.
- ^ Wang Huo (2009-09-01). 英雄为国—节振国传奇 (in Chinese). Chengdu: Sichuan Literature and Art Publishing House. ISBN 9787541128875.
- 王火 (1924~). chinawriter.com.cn (in Chinese).
- 王火(1924~). sczjw.cn (in Chinese).
Mao Dun Literature Prize | |
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1st (1982) |
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2nd (1985) | |
3rd (1991) |
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4th (1997) |
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5th (2000) |
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6th (2005) |
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7th (2008) |
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8th (2011) |
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9th (2015) |
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10th (2019) |
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11th (2023) |
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- 1924 births
- Fudan University alumni
- Short story writers from Shanghai
- Living people
- 20th-century Chinese novelists
- Chinese male short story writers
- Chinese dramatists and playwrights
- Chinese Communist Party politicians from Shanghai
- People's Republic of China politicians from Shanghai
- Mao Dun Literature Prize laureates
- Chinese male novelists
- 20th-century Chinese short story writers