Feri Lainà ¡ÃÂek (born 5 October 1959), also known as Franc Lainà ¡ÃÂek, is a Slovenian writer, mainly of novels for both adults and youth. Many of his novels have been adapted into films, including the box-office hit Rooster's Breakfast, based on his 1999 novel Petelinji zajtrk. He has won many awards for his novels, and in 2021 he received the Preà ¡eren Lifetime Achievement Award.
Feri Lainà ¡ÃÂek was born on 5 October 1959 into a Slovene Lutheran family in the village of Dolenci (part of à  alovci), in northeastern Slovenia, then part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He studied journalism at the University of Ljubljana.
Lainà ¡ÃÂek is a writer, poet, and screenwriter. He has written at least 25 novels, most of which have been translated into other languages, and many of which have been made into films.
He started work at Radio Ljubljana, on both the daily news and drama editorial teams, until around 1983, when he became a freelance writer.
He has written for both adults and young people. His 1990s novels represent a departure from the (post)modernist pattern towards realistic fiction. He did not contemporary literary groups of his time, such as the Nova revija or Literatura revija.
His 1999 novel, Petelinji zajtrk (Rooster's Breakfast), became the basis of the screenplay for Marko Naberà ¡nik's 2007 film Rooster's Breakfast, which was highly successful at the box office.
His 2007 novel The Untouchables (Nedotakljivi) became the basis of another film by Naberà ¡nik, Shanghai Gypsy (2012). The book and film tell a multi-generational story of the Slovenian Romani Mirga family, and the film won the Best Screenplay award at the Montreal World Film Festival.
Lainà ¡ÃÂek has also created works in the Prekmurje Slovene dialect, professing a Prekmurje identity.
In the parliamentary elections of 2008, Lainà ¡ÃÂek ran for the Slovenian National Assembly for the social liberal party Zares.
Lainà ¡ÃÂek lives in the town of Murska Sobota, in the Prekmurje region.
He is also known as Franc Lainà ¡ÃÂek.