Romulus Bărbulescu Explained

Romulus Bărbulescu
Birth Date:27 October 1925
Birth Place:Sulina, Romania
Death Date:February 9, 2010
Death Place:Bucharest
Occupation:short story writer, novelist, translator
Nationality:Romanian
Period:1963–2010
Genre:science fiction

Romulus Bărbulescu (October 27, 1925, Sulina – February 9, 2010, Bucharest) was a Romanian science-fiction writer.

In 1963, Bărbulescu published "Constellations from the Waters," the first of 10 science fiction novels that established him and his co-author, George Anania, as pioneers of the genre in Romania. They drew their inspiration from Russian writers like Ivan Efremov or Arkady and Boris Strugatsky, or the Polish author Stanislaw Lem. In a communist society where criticizing current social norms was forbidden, alternative reality was good metaphor, and even better, safe.In the 1980s, the government of Romanian President Nicolae Ceaușescu took control of Anania and Bărbulescu's fan clubs to monitor discussions on utopian societies and social justice.[1]

Published books

With George Anania

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Kevin J. O'Brien – Science fiction sales – the post-Soviet generation – Technology & Media, at International Herald Tribune October 29, 2006