Ioana Pârvulescu
WINNER
WINNER

Biography
IOANA PÂRVULESCU (born in 1960 in Romania) is a writer and a professor at the Faculty of Letters in Bucharest, where she teaches modern Romanian literature and coordinates a master’s program in editing. For 18 years, she was a weekly columnist for România literară, and at Humanitas Publishing House, she initiated the series of universal literature “Cartea de pe noptieră.”
She has written more than 20 books, including bestselling essays and novels about past eras, about Bucharest, and Brașov (Viața începe vineri / Life Begins on Friday, 2009; Viitorul începe luni / The Future Begins on Monday, 2012; The Innocents, 2016), the biblical novel Prevestirea / Jonah and His Daughter (2020), the fantasy novel Aurul pisicii (2024), and two children’s books (Invizibilii, 2022, inspiration for a stage musical in 2025 and Trei zile nemaipomenite, 2023). Her works often explore everyday life in the 19th and 20th centuries.
She is also a translator from French and German, having translated works by Maurice Nadeau, Milan Kundera, Angelus Silesius, and Rainer Maria Rilke, among others. Among the collective volumes she has coordinated, the most significant is I Lived Under Communism, a collection about everyday life during the communist regime.
Her novels have been translated into 15 European languages. She has won the European Union Prize for Literature for her novel Life Begins on Friday (2013)
Nominated book : Viaţa începe vineri (Life Begins on Friday)
Summary
Life Begins on Friday is a unique and charming journey into the amazing world of times gone by – a world more than 100 years distant, but very similar to our own in its core features.
A young man is found lying unconscious on the outskirts of Bucharest. No one knows who he is and everyone has a different theory about how he got there.
The stories of the various characters unfold, each closely interwoven with the next, and outlining the features of what ultimately turns out to be the most important and most powerful character of all: the city of Bucharest itself. The novel covers the last 13 days of 1897 and culminates in a beautiful tableau of the future as imagined by the different characters.
We might, in fact, say that it is we who inhabit their future. And so too does Dan Creţu, alias Dan Kretzu, the present-day journalist hurled back in time by some mysterious process for just long enough to allow us a wonderful glimpse into a remote, almost forgotten world, but one still very much alive in our hearts.

Excerpts
Related publications
EUPL Anthology 2013
Various authors