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  2. Sonechka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonechka

    The novella Sonechka tells the life story of a Russian booklover. Sonechka spends her youth immersed in the world of Russian literature, living her life vicariously through the characters in books. One day, when Sonechka is working at the local library, a man named Robert Viktorovich inquires about an ensemble of French books.

  3. List of Russian women writers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Russian_women_writers

    Elena Akselrod (born 1932), Belarus-born Russian poet, translator; Ogdo Aksyonova (1936–1995), poet, short story writer, founder of Dolgan written literature; Tatiana Aleshina (born 1961), singer-songwriter, poet, short story writer; Margarita Aliger (1915–1992), poet, essayist, journalist

  4. Poor Liza - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poor_Liza

    "Poor Liza" (Russian: Бедная Лиза, romanized: Bednaya Liza) [2] is a 1792 short story or sentimental novella [3] by the Russian author Nikolay Karamzin. It is one of Karamzin's best-known short stories in Russia.

  5. Category:Russian women writers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Russian_women_writers

    Russian women non-fiction writers (6 C) Russian women novelists (60 P) P. Russian women poets (1 C, 124 P) S. Russian women screenwriters (14 P) Russian women short ...

  6. Elena Chizhova - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elena_Chizhova

    Elena Semenovna Chizhova (Russian: Еле́на Семёновна Чижо́ва; born 1957) is a Russian writer, whose work is characterized by its reexamination of Russian history and society. She is best known for her 2009 novel Vremia zhenshchin, which won that year's Russian Booker Prize.

  7. Mirra Lokhvitskaya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirra_Lokhvitskaya

    The Dictionary of Russian Women Writers (1994) admitted that Lokhvitskaya's "influence on her contemporaries and on later poets is only beginning to be recognized." [23] The American slavist V. F. Markov called Lokhvitskaya's legacy "a treasury of prescience", suggesting that it was her and not Akhmatova who "taught [Russian] women how to speak."

  8. The Mistress of the Copper Mountain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mistress_of_the_Copper...

    The Mistress of the Copper Mountain may be called just "The Mistress of the Mountain", [26] and also has many other names, such as The Mountain Mother (Russian: Горная матка, romanized: Gornaja matka), [6] [27] The Golden Woman (Russian: Золотая баба, romanized: Zolotaya baba), [6] The Stone Maiden (Russian: Каменная девка, romanized: Kamennaja devka), [28 ...

  9. Lidiia Alekseeva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lidiia_Alekseeva

    Lidiia Alekseevna Alekseeva, née Devel (1909–1989) was a Russian émigré poet and writer of short stories. She was among the group of Russians who were forced to emigrate from the country after the rise of Bolshevism. Her writing reflects this hardship but also contains hints of optimism and beauty.