Jan Matzal Troska

Jan Matzal (August 3, 1881 in Valašské Klobouky, Moravia September 3, 1961 in Prague), known under pen names J. M. Troska and Jan Merfort, was a Czech writer.

After his studies Jan Matzal worked in the Škoda Works and other industrial companies. During World War I he was sent to the front because of attempt to cover up a sabotage by factory workers. After the war Matzal lived in Yugoslavia (1921-1926), then returned to Czechoslovakia. As a lifelong sufferer from Ménière’s disease he obtained a disability pension at the age of 49. During years 19321949, he spent his time by writing.

Writer

He published his first novel, Boží soud (1935, about village life), under the pen name Jan Merfort. Later (1936 1943) he used the pen name J. M. Troska (Troska means a ruin in Czech, to point out his physical suffering) and published mostly science fiction novels. In these novels Matzal freely ignored rules of physics, used very simple and naïve language, employed dramatic situations and many new ideas of his time (powerful robots, huge underground cities constructed inside a Hollow Earth, nuclear weapons, automatically guided missiles, interplanetary travels, cosmic empires, aliens and telepathy). His books were very popular among children and teenagers: they are similar to fairy tales, where characters are crystal clear and the good always wins.

The books were illustrated by Zdeněk Burian (covers) and Jiří Wowk. Some of his books were reprinted in 196070 (illustrated by Miloš Novák) and 19902000 (illustrated by Teodor Rotrekl).

Works

Trivia

A main-belt asteroid 17776 Troska discovered in 1998 by a Czech astronomer from the Ondřejov Observatory was named after the writer. The name was chosen at the meeting of sci-fi fans Avalcon in Chotěboř on May 5, 2001.

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