Background
August Mälk was born on 4 October 1900, in Lümanda Parish in the village of Koovi (then named Kipi-Koovi), located on the west coast of the island of Saaremaa, in modern-day Estonia (then part of the Governorate of Livonia in the Russian Empire).
Education
He attended the University of Tartu from 1923 to 1925 and then returned to Saaremaa to work as a teacher.
Career
He began his literary career while headmaster of the elementary school in Lümanda, publishing his first novel, Kesaliblik in 1926. Mälk married Pauline Triipan in 1933. The couple had one daughter.
lieutenant was the first volume of a trilogy that also included Taeva Palge All (Under the Face of Heaven) and Hea Sadam (The Good Portuguese).
In addition to his 18 novels, he also wrote plays, short stories and two books of memoirs. Several of his novels have been translated into German and Finnish.
Mälk became involved in politics in the 1930s. In 1938, he was elected to the Chamber of Deputies (Riigivolikogu), where he served until the Soviet invasion of Estonia in 1940.
In 1944, Mälk fled into exile in Sweden during the second Soviet invasion of Estonia.
In Stockholm, he served as the chairman of the Estonian Writers Union Abroad (Välismaine Eesti Kirjanike Liit) from its founding in 1945 until 1982. He died in Stockholm in 1987. In 2000, the Estonian Post Office issued a stamp commemorating the centenary of Mälk"s birth.
Membership
He was a member of the National Constituent Assembly (Rahvuskogu) in 1937.