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Novelist Ismail Kadare -- who has died aged 88 -- used his pen as a stealth weapon to survive Albania's paranoid communist dictator Enver Hoxha. His sophisticated storytelling -- often likened to that of George Orwell or Franz Kafka -- used metaphor and irony to reveal the nature of tyranny under Hoxha, who ruled Albania from 1946 until his death in 1985. "Dark times bring unpleasant but beautiful surprises," Kadare told AFP.

"Literature has often produced magnificent works in dark ages as if it was seeking to remedy the misfortune inflicted on people," he said. He was often tipped to win a Nobel prize for his towering body of work which delved into his country's myths and history to dissect the mechanisms of totalitarianism. Kadare's novels, essays and poems have been translated into more than 40 languages, making him the Balkans' best-known modern novelist.



The prolific writer broke ranks with isolated Albania's communists and fled to Paris a few months before the government collapsed in the early 1990s. He wrote about his disillusionment in his book "The Albanian Spring -- The Anatomy of Tyranny". Born in Gjirokaster in southern Albania on January 28, 1936, Kadare was inspired by Shakespeare's "Macbeth" as a child and counted the playwright, as well as Dante and Cervantes, among his heroes.

Ironically, the dictator Hoxha hailed from the same mountain town. Kadare studied languages and literature in Tirana before attending the Gorky Institute of World Literature in Moscow. .

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