Synopses & Reviews
The living voices of eleven leading Russian authors: Boris Akunin, Evgeny Grishkovets, Eduard Limonov, Yuri Mamleev, Viktor Pelevin, Ludmila Petrushevskaya, Nina Sadur, Mikhail Shishkin, Vladimir Sorokin, Tatyana Tolstaya, and Ludmila Ulitskaya.
The writers interviewed for this book represent various tendencies and age groups, reflecting the diversity of themes and styles in Russian literature. The book also touches on the question of how literature is reacting to the rising neo-conservatism and political pressure in Russian society and culture.
None of the authors were acknowledged in the Soviet Union and were carried into Russian literature on the waves of the perestroika. While Limonov and Mamleyev were known abroad even back in Soviet times, the others were published in English translation only in the 1990s. They are all hugely known in Russia.
Synopsis
The living voices of eleven leading Russian authors. Kristina Rotkirch's book presents the reader with an overview of contemporary Russian literature: Boris Akunin, Yuri Mamleev, Yevgeni Grishkovets, Eduard Limonov, Victor Pelevin, Lyudmila Petrushevskaya, Nina Sadur, Vladimir Sorokin, Lyudmila Ulitskaya, Ivan Shishkin, and Tatyana Tolstaya. The contrast in styles, life experiences, and outlooks lends it a width of perspective that few books can offer.
About the Author
The book's general editor is Anna Ljunggren, Professor in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Stockholm University, in collaboration with Nikolai Bogomolov and Oleg Lekmanov of the Department of Journalism at Moscow State University.
The interviewer, Kristina Rotkirch, is a noted journalist, critic, and Finnish-Swedish translator of Russian literature