Dimitar Dimov

For the soccer player, see Dimitar Dimov (footballer).

Dimitar Todorov Dimov (Bulgarian: Димитър Тодоров Димов, 25 June 1909 1 April 1966) was a Bulgarian dramatist, novelist, and veterinary surgeon.

Biography

Born in Lovech, he is best known for his best-selling novel Tobacco (Bulgarian: Тютюн, translit. Tyutyun, 1951), which was made into the 1962 film Tobacco, directed by Nikola Korabov. The plot of Dimov's "Tobacco" deals with the fates of a number of characters connected to a major tobacco factory. The central thread of the plot is the story of Boris, an ambitious youth of poor origins who renounces his first love Irina to marry Maria, the heiress of the tobacco business. He proceeds to steer the business with great greed and ruthlessness. His wife's descent into insanity and death in the loveless marriage subsequently allows him to marry Irina, who has studied to become a nurse, but is seduced by the promise of the luxurious life as a mistress and, eventually, spouse of an affluent factory owner. However, their common life is poisoned by the preceding events and by their own selfishness and moral decay. Other characters, including a brother of Boris and a friend of Irina who works at the factory, are devoted to the Communist movement and its struggle; these and various other plot threads make the book into a broader picture of capitalist Bulgaria in the years leading up to the communist seizure of power. The novel criticises the egoism, careerism, greed and exploitation characteristic of the class society that it depicts from a socialist perspective.

Other novels authored by Dimov are Lieutenant Benz (1938), a story of fatal love between flawed characters during World War I, and Doomed Souls (1945), a tragic tale of a dissolute young Englishwoman's passionate obsession with a fanatical and reactionary Jesuit monk set in Spain during the civil war. His plays included Holiday in Arko Iris and Women with a Past.[1]

Dimov died in Bucharest, Romania. There is a bust of Dimov in the Borisova gradina park behind the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia. His daughter, Theodora Dimova, is also a writer. In addition, a number of elementary schools across Bulgaria are named in his honor (particularly in Lovech, his hometown, and in Plovdiv).

References

  1. Rubin, Don (1994). The World encyclopedia of contemporary theatre. Taylor and Francis. p. 159. ISBN 0-415-05928-3.

Bibliography

External links

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