Péter Farkas (born 15 November 1955, in Budapest) is a Hungarian-German writer living in Cologne, Germany.
[1][2] Starting in the late seventies he was active in Hungary’s democratic opposition as editor of the samizdat Túlpartról (‘From the Far Side’, 1979).
In Cologne he founded the Humane Gesellschaft für geistige Nekrophilie and Verlag IL, where he was an organizer of visual arts events and publisher of the arts series Edition Nekrophil (Hermann Nitsch, Jürgen Klauke, Endre Tot, Curtis Anderson etc.).
His main work Gólem,[3] an essayistic hypertext novel is considered the first significant Hungarian hyperfiction.
In 2010, Farkas received the Sándor Márai Prize[13] awarded by the Hungarian Ministry of Education and Culture, for his innovatively poetic style of prose.