He attended Sfântul Iosif primary school and Saint Sava National College in his native city, followed by the literature and philosophy faculty of the University of Bucharest from 1931 to 1936.
Contributors to the latter publication included Eugène Ionesco, Eugen Jebeleanu, Emil Botta, Vasile Voiculescu and Anton Holban.
[1] Rădulescu's first book was Dragostea noastră cea de toate zilele (1934), a short story collection.
Other volumes of sketches and short stories are Nimic despre Japonia (1935), 4 pe trimestrul 2 (1942) and Fetele au crescut (1943).
Turnul Babel, which appeared in 1940 and had reached a third edition by 1946, pleasantly depicts a panorama of the literary world at the end of the interwar period.