Miško Kranjec
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Miško Kranjec (Hungarian: Krányecz) (around September 15, 1908 – June 8, 1983) was a Slovene writer.
Kranjec was born in the village of Velika Polana in what was then the Kingdom of Hungary in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, as the son of the village tailor Mihalj Kranjec. When he was eleven years old, his native region of Prekmurje was incorporated in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and thus to Slovenia.
Kranjec studied Slavic philology at the University of Ljubljana. In the 1930s, he started writing his first short stories, following the emerging trend of social realism. He incorporated themes from his native Prekmurje region, which was a novelty back then. In Ljubljana, he became a journalist and a left-wing political activist. In 1941, just prior to the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia, Kranjec became member of the Yugoslav Communist Party.
During World War Two, he actively collaborated with the Liberation Front of the Slovenian People. After the Communist takeover in 1945, he covered several position in the regime's cultural policy. In 1953, he became a member of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts.
Among his prolific works, the most famous are the colelctions of short stories, entitled Povest o dobrih ljudeh ("A Story on Good People") and Strici so mi povedali ("As My Uncles Told Me").
He died in Ljubljana.

