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| birth_place = Adwa, Tigray Province, Ethiopia | death_date = | death_place= Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | occupation = writer | citizenship = Ethiopian | language = Amharic, Tigrigna, English, French | notableworks = ''ትኩሳት (Fever)'' ''ሌቱም አይነጋልኝ (Endless Night)'' ''ሰባተኛው መላክ (The Seventh Angel)'' | influences = Émile Zola, Albert Camus | relatives= }} Sebhat-Leab Gebre-Egziabher (var. Gebre Egziabher, Gebregziabher; ) (1936–February 20, 2012〔〔Ethiopian calendar 1928–12 Yäkatit, 2004 (፩፱፪፰–፲፪ የካቲት ፳፻፬)〕) was an Ethiopian writer. ==Life== Sebhat was born in 1928 in Tigray region near the historical town of Adwa in a village called Erba Gered. He published works of fiction and non fiction in French and Amharic. Some of his works are available "retold" in English. He also worked as a journalist and columnist for the ''Ethiopian Herald'', ''Addis Zemen'', ''Menen'' magazine and other newspapers and magazines in his long writing career. He is famous for pioneering the naturalist writing style in Amharic. He has a unique writing style which is not constrained by the traditional Ethiopian writing style, nor is his syntax orthodox. Even if he uses simple words and seemingly light prose, Sebhat's concepts are highly sophisticated and philosophical. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Sebhat Gebre-Egziabher」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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