
Josef Urban
Writing
Biography
Josef Urban is a graduate of Charles University, Faculty of Science, where he studied engineering geology and hydrogeology. The former national white-water kayak team member began writing after finishing the "Czech Rafting"an exploratory project mapping the deepest canyons on earth. The successful travelog, The Deepest Valley of the World, came into being in 1998. In the same year, Urban's first authorial film The Testament was made, which won one of the main awards at the IFF of Mountaineering Films in Teplice. The story tells of the author's first solo trip down the Nepalese wild river Buri Gandaki. Habermann's Mill, today a cult book, became a bestseller in 2000, and its screenwriting version brought the Orfeus Film Award to Urban, awarded within the Czech Lion Award (Sazka Award). Together with Dan Krzywon, Urban shot a documentary drama on the occasion of the 80th anniversary of the Munich Agreement, and the film Where the Stones Roll, dedicated to the "Lestina massacre" in 1945. In 2007 a feature-length film based on Urban's novel and screenplay At One's Own Risk directed by Filip Renc, was made. Three years later, Habermann's Mill arrived in cinemas, also based on the author's screenplay and novel, and directed by Juraj Herz. However, the author explored his Sudeten theme with another feature-length project, 7 Days of Sins directed by Jiri Chlumsky, which won several foreign awards, including the Slovak Igriz Award, and an award at the International War Film Festival in Volokolamsk. The Albatros published the novel Once upon a Time in Paradise in 2015, concerning the fate of the legendary climber Joska Smitko, who was executed by the Nazis in the last days of the war. In the same year a feature film was released. In 2018, Urban published The Dog Thief, a collection of short stories, comprised of ten adventure stories about the strength of a dog-man relationship illustrated by the legendary painter of the Rapid Arrows Club, Marko Cermak. On his latest novel, Return to Valbone, the author began working in 2016, when he first ventured to Albania. The destination of his trip was the mountain range Prokletije, where three Czech students went missing in 2001.
Known For

A story set in a small village in Sudetenland between 1937 and 1945. "Habermann" is based on true events.
Habermann

This story actually happened in the region around the city of Sumperk in Jeseniky Mountains in May 1945. The disappearance of Agnes, the German wife of a Czech forester Jan Olsan is a dark mystery. She is the only one who knows who and for what reason is looking for her. It's the end of the war, times are bad and the Czechs are coming back from the inland to the frontier. The guards are forming and soldiers are coming. Fate brings together the outlaw Jan and his German brother-in-law Jurgen who has just returned from the eastern front line. Both men are looking for exactly the same woman and that is Agnes. But Agnes escaped; she is running away through the deep woods followed by the most powerful man of the county. Running away for what she had witnessed. The fatality of the relationship between Agnes and Jan can only be learned in the mountains on this thorny journey.
Seven Days of Sin

The story of the dramatic fate of the Czech climber Josef speck and his comrades, executed by the Nazis in April 1945 in Theresienstadt.