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  1. Lyudmila Stefanovna Petrushevskaya (Russian: Людмила Стефановна Петрушевская; born 26 May 1938) is a Russian writer, novelist and playwright. She began her career writing short stories and plays, which were often censored by the Soviet government, [1] and following perestroika , published a number of well-respected works of prose.

  2. Ludmilla Stefanovna Petrushevskaya (Russian: Людмила Петрушевская) is a Russian writer, novelist and playwright. Her works include the novels The Time Night (1992) and The Number One, both short-listed for the Russian Booker Prize, and Immortal Love, a collection of short stories and monologues. Since the late 1980s her plays ...

  3. Born: 1938. Quick Study: Ludmila Petrushevskaya is one of contemporary Russia’s most distinctive writers: she is especially renowned as a writer of dark and creepy short stories, a dramatist who loves absurdity, and a cabaret performer. The Petrushevskaya File: Though Ludmila Petrushevskaya wrote during the Soviet era, her work, which often looks at seamy and uncomfortable aspects of life, was generally banned, remaining largely unpublished until perestroika, when her collection Immortal ...

  4. Jul 20, 2018 · Lyudmila Petrushevskaya, one of the most acclaimed Russian writers and truly a “living legend,” turned 80 years old in May. To celebrate this important anniversary, the Moscow Museum of Modern ...

  5. Jul 11, 2017 · Earlier this year, Russian news agencies reported that the author Ludmilla Petrushevskaya had been accused, by the Public Council of the Russian Orthodox Church of Krasnoyarsk, of promoting drug ...

  6. Ludmilla Petrushevskaya was born in 1938 in Moscow, where she still lives. She is the author of more than fifteen collections of prose, including the New York Times bestseller There Once Lived a Woman Who Tried to Kill Her Neighbor’s Baby: Scary Fairy Tales (2009), ...

  7. Lyudmila Petrushevskaya, a Russian writer and playwright who has published over 20 books, was born in Moscow in 1938. During the war she wandered between relatives and even stayed at an orphanage, “stealing heads of herring from the neighbours’ garbage bins,” she says. She first met her mother when she was nine years old. Today ...

  8. Lyudmila Petrushevskaya is a ³playwright, poet, and prose writer, whose own devastated childhood in children¶s homes, on the edges of war and surrounded by the Terror, shapes her dark vision and style´ (Emerson 232). 7 2.1 Early Life Background Information and Writing Influences Lyudmila Petrushevskaya was born in 1938 in Moscow, not long before World War II began. Her childhood was far from peaceful, as was the reality for much

  9. Other articles where Lyudmila Petrushevskaya is discussed: Russian literature: Thaws and freezes: Lyudmila Petrushevskaya’s plays portray family life; her collection of stories Bessmertnaya lyubov (1988; Immortal Love) could be published only under Mikhail Gorbachev. Works first published in full in the West and in fundamental ways critical of Soviet ideology and culture include Andrey Bitov’s experimental novel…

  10. Ludmilla Petrushevskaya. Ludmilla Petrushevskaya is a short-story writer and playwright. A longer version of ‘Our Circle’ (Granta 30) is published in Petrushevskaya’s first collection of stories, still not published in English, entitled Immortal Love. Petrushevskaya and Victoria Tokareva, along with Tatyana Tolstaya, are regarded as being in the vanguard of a new generation of Soviet fiction writers.

  11. Sep 17, 2018 · Deborah Treisman talks to the Russian author Ludmilla Petrushevskaya about “Poor Girl,” her short story from the September 24, 2018, issue of The New Yorker.

  12. 4. Lyudmila Petrushevskaya. Petrushevskaya is at present one of the most controversial authors on the Soviet literary scene. Her dramas provoke the most extreme and opposite reactions, because she ignores existing artistic canons while broaching new subjects and issues. The unmitigated harsh- ness with which she evokes the blatantly ugly and ...

  13. Ludmila Petrushevskaya is a novelist, playwright, poet, screenwriter, author of watercolours and monotypes, painter and director of eight of her own animated films ("Studio of Manual Labour ...

  14. Lyudmila Stefanovna Petrushevskaya is a Russian writer, novelist and playwright. She began her career writing short stories and plays, which were often censored by the Soviet government, and following perestroika, published a number of well-respected works of prose.

  15. Aug 1, 2023 · Lyudmila Petrushevskaya, one of Russia’s most renowned literary and cultural figures, announced in a Telegram post that she could no longer write. “That’s it,” she wrote. “That’s it ...

  16. Feb 9, 2017 · By Ludmilla Petrushevskaya. Translated by Anna Summers. Illustrated. 149 pp. Penguin Books. Paper, $16. Russian literature is replete with powerful memoirs of childhood: Tolstoy, Gorky, Nabokov ...

  17. With the satirical eye of Cindy Sherman, the psychological perceptiveness of Dostoevsky, and the bleak absurdities of Beckett, Petrushevskaya blends macabre spectacle with transformative moments of grace and shows just why she is Russia's preeminent contemporary fiction writer. Read more. View more.

  18. Jan 11, 2017 · Ludmilla Petrushevskaya’s biography reads much like that of one of her female protagonists. It is fraught with the hardships of the Soviet era and is darkly magical. Growing up under Stalin’s rule, Petrushevskaya and her family, many of them former Bolsheviks, were forced to witness the persecution, imprisonment, and death of friends and relatives. Food and housing was always scarce, forcing many families to live in cramped, subdivided apartments.

  19. Lyudmila Petrushevskaya. Writer: Pyasachen chasovnik. Lyudmila Petrushevskaya was born on May 26, 1938. The Moscow-born Petrushevskaya is regarded as one of Russia's most prominent contemporary writers, whose writing combines postmodernist trends with the psychological insights and parody touches of writers such as Anton Chekhov. Over the last few decades, she has been one of the most acclaimed contemporary writers at work in Eastern Europe; Publishers Weekly has called her "one...

  20. Dec 2, 2009 · ANASTASIA KAZAKOVALudmilla Petrushevskaya. “Russian literature has been a kind of religion in this country–a religion based on the moral position of writers, on their suffering,” Ludmilla ...

  21. Abstract. Petrushevskaya is at present one of the most controversial authors on the Soviet literary scene. Her dramas provoke the most extreme and opposite reactions, because she ignores existing artistic canons while broaching new subjects and issues. The unmitigated harshness with which she evokes the blatantly ugly and utterly bleak jolts ...

  22. Lyudmila Stefanovna Petrushevskaya was born on 26 May, 1938 into the family of an office worker in Moscow. She struggled through her hard starving post-war childhood, staying with some of her relatives, and even lived in an orphan asylum near Ufa. After the war she returned to Moscow and graduated from the Journalism Faculty of the Moscow University. Afterwards she was a correspondent for some Moscow newspapers and worked in publishing houses; in 1972 she became the editor at the Central ...

  23. Ludmilla Petrushevskaya has 93 books on Goodreads with 61961 ratings. Ludmilla Petrushevskaya’s most popular book is There Once Lived a Woman Who Tried t...