Dragan Todorović

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Photo: S. Jestrovic
Photo: S. Jestrovic

Dragan Todorović (born in September 1958 in Kragujevac, Serbia) is a writer and multimedia artist. Until 1995 he lived in Yugoslavia, where he worked as a journalist, editor, and TV personality.

Between 1977 and 1995 Todorovic published over 2,000 articles (commentaries, interviews, essays and reports) in leading magazines of Yugoslavia. On radio, he worked as a host, writer and producer, among other things writing and directing 24 radio-plays for Radio Politika. He also made two TV documentaries and hosted over 150 TV shows.

He won the Best Young Journalist award in 1980. He published four books in Yugoslavia: Tajfun zvani Bruce (Hurricane Called Bruce, 1989—biography of Bruce Springsteen), Džokej pun burbona (Jockey Full of Bourbon, 1990—Tom Waits' poetry - translation and introduction), Pogled kroz prozor metroa (View Through the Window of a Subway, 1991—biography of Tom Waits), and Sen & san (A Shadow and a Dream, 1993—conceptual book of poetry). His series of essays on rock, titled Pesme uz koje ne igram (The Songs I don't Dance to), published in Politika's Rock Magazine, had a cult status in the country. He had two solo exhibitions in Belgrade and directed two theatre shows. He is in the Serbian edition of Who's Who.

Dragan continued to write after moving to Canada. He published in Toronto Star, This Magazine, Saturday Night, NOW, Ottawa Citizen and other Canadian publications. In 1997 his article Border Crossing was nominated for the Canadian National Magazine Award. In 1998 he was part of the prestigious Creative Journalism program at Banff Centre for the Arts. His essay Ticket to Fiction was published in 2000 as part of the collection To Arrive Where You Are (Banff Press). The same year, he worked with Ken Finkleman as the script consultant on his TV series Foreign Objects (episode “Evil”), where he also played one of the leading roles.

His writing was described as “fascinating, liquid storytelling, which leads the reader smoothly from the sociology of rock and roll, through brilliant essayistic insights, to the heavy, Hemingwayesque prose,” and “impeccable pacing with the occasional flight of dark fantasy”.

For his multimedia work, Dragan won awards at the New York Festivals, John Caples International Awards, and Astound International Competition (for his interactive poetry site, Six Walks on Isabella Street). His most recent project was a sound-art piece for CBC Radio One, titled In My Language I am Smart.

In September 2005 Dragan moved to England. His new book, titled The Book of Revenge, was published in March 2006 by Random House. It was awarded the Nereus Writer's Trust of Canada Non-fiction Prize, and nominated for British Columbia Award for Canadian Non-Fiction.

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