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Anatoly Kudryavitsky is a Moscow-born Irish experimental poet, the grandson of an Irishman who ended up in Stalin's GULAG. He lives in Dublin, Ireland. His collection of poems, "Shadow of Time" was published by Goldsmith Press in 2005, followed by three collections of his haiku, the latest being "Horizon" (Red Moon Press, 2016). Two of his novels, "disUNITY" (2014) and "The Flying Dutchman" (2018) have been published in the UK by Glagoslav. He has also edited and translated into English anthologies of contemporary German, Ukrainian and Russian poetry, "Coloured Handprints" (Dedalus, 2015),…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Anatoly Kudryavitsky is a Moscow-born Irish experimental poet, the grandson of an Irishman who ended up in Stalin's GULAG. He lives in Dublin, Ireland. His collection of poems, "Shadow of Time" was published by Goldsmith Press in 2005, followed by three collections of his haiku, the latest being "Horizon" (Red Moon Press, 2016). Two of his novels, "disUNITY" (2014) and "The Flying Dutchman" (2018) have been published in the UK by Glagoslav. He has also edited and translated into English anthologies of contemporary German, Ukrainian and Russian poetry, "Coloured Handprints" (Dedalus, 2015), "The Frontier" (Glagoslav, 2017) and "Mirror Sand" (Glagoslav, 2018), and edited two anthologies of Irish haiku. He won the Maria Edgeworth Poetry Prize (2003), and the Mihai Eminescu Academy Award for poetry (2017), and was twice nominated for the Pushcart Poetry Prize by the American Journal of Poetry and Shot Glass Journal.
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Autorenporträt
Born in Moscow, Anatoly Kudryavitsky is the grandson of an Irishman who was imprisoned in Stalin's GULAG. Educated at the Moscow Medical Academy, he holds a PhD in Biomedical Science. In Russia, he worked as a researcher, as a magazine editor, and as a literary translator. Blacklisted in the Soviet Union until 1988, he was first published openly in 1989. Since then, he has authored three novels, The Case-Book of Inspector Mylls (Zakharov Books, Moscow, 2008), The Flying Dutchman (Text Publishers, Moscow, 2013) and Shadowplay on a Sunless Day (Text Publishers, Moscow, 2014), as well as a book of his novellas and short stories, A Parade of Mirror and Reflections (Text Publishers, Moscow, 2017). He has also published seven collections of his poetry in Russian and three collections of his English-language poems, the latest being Horizon (Red Moon Press, 2016). He edited A Night in the Nabokov Hotel (Dedalus Press, 2006), an anthology of contemporary Russian poetry in his translations into English, and Coloured Handprints (Dedalus Press, 2015), an anthology of contemporary German-language poetry in his translations into English. He has also translated English-language classics into Russian and Polish and Swedish poetry into English. Kudryavitsky has won many international awards for his English-language haiku, and is regarded as one of the most prominent European haiku poets. He lives in Co. Dublin, Ireland, and works as the editor of SurVision, an international magazine for Neo-Surrealist poetry, and Shamrock, an international haiku magazine. He has given readings and spoken at many European literary festivals. His poems and stories have been translated into fourteen languages.