Kir Bulychev
Kir Bulychev is probably the most famous author of Science Fiction and Speculative Fiction for children in Russia, but before 1982 very few knew that he was a Pen Name of Dr. Igor Vsevolodovich Mozheiko (1934 – 2003), a well known historian and author whose popular history books often stood on the same shelves as his alter ego's SF. After graduating school he enrolled in a Moscow State Foreign Languages institute where he majored in South-Eastern Asian languages and became a specialist in Burmese history. He started writing early, right after graduating from the institute, under his real name, but most of his early works were popular history and geography essays about East Asia and realistic short stories.
He received his Ph.D degree in 1965, around the time he first turned to a SF. Believing that the brass at the Institute of Oriental Studies, where he was employed at the time, wouldn't approve of such "frivolous" activity of their newly minted postdoc, he published his first stories (many of which he made up to entertain his daughter Alisa) under various pseudonyms in the popular Mir Priklyucheniy (Adventure World) almanac. His most famous pen name, though, wasn't among them: it had to wait until the next year.
In 1966 an amusing incident happened in the Iskatel magazine, publishing detectives and science fiction. Just a day before the deadline for sending the work to printers, one of foreign SF stories was rejected. But as ill luck would have it, the cover of the magazine featuring the illustration to this very story was already printed. A tiny dinosaur sitting in a jar was sadly looking from the cover to the editors. To save the situation, a number of people decided each of them would write a story and the best story would go into the magazine. Dr. Mozheiko happened to win this urgent contest, and his story When did dinosaurs die out? went to print. To sign this unexpected creation he made up a new pen name based on his wife's name and his mother's maiden name. At this point he wasn't even suspecting that he was destined to become one of the most famous Russian SF writers.
Besides numerous SF stories, translations of various American SF books, research works on history, Oriental and literature studies, Bulychev also wrote over two hundred poems and a lot of short stories. He also wrote the scripts for over twenty movies. The feature film Per Aspera Ad Astra AKA Humanoid Woman (1980), feature-length[1] animated cartoon ‘The Mystery of the Third Planet’ (for these two he was awarded the State Prize in 1982) and Guest From the Future TV miniseries (1984) are considered among the best screen versions of Bulychev’s books.
One of the central characters of his books, Alisa Selezneva, a courageous and curious girl from the future is especially beloved by the readers; screen versions of some of his gripping fanciful books contributed much to "Alisa’s cult" among teenagers of the 1980-90s. In a case of Write Who You Know, Alisa is named for his daughter, Alisa's mother Kira for his wife, and Alisa's father Igor for himself. It came to bite him later, though, when this mania forced him tu churn up more and more Alisa books, which he came to somewhat resent, as he'd much prefer to write something else. He would resent that editors and readers were expecting new children tales from him. "But I try it not to be children SF that I'm writing and it's not only fiction for kids I write." – He said in one of the interviews.
A versatile and prolific author, Bulychev wrote a great many other books: an ironical epic about a God-forsaken town Great Gusliar, ‘adult’ cycle about cosmic doctor Vladislav Pavlysh, and many others. While SF writer Bulychev was creating new worlds, historian Igor Mozheiko went on carrying out his research work. The latter issued a number of monographs, popular science books ‘7 and 37 Wonders’, ‘Pirates, Corsairs, and Raiders’, and ‘Year 1185: East - West’. Besides, he defended his doctoral dissertation on the theme: “The Buddhist Sangha and the State in Burma”
Some of Kir Bulychev’s books were published in English: Half a Life (1977), Gusliar Wonders (1983), Earth And Elsewhere (1985), Abduction Of A Sorcerer (1989), Those Who Survive (2000), Alice: The Girl from Earth (2002), and South-East Asia: Unity in Diversity (1989).
Kir Bulychev died on 5 September, 2003 at the age of 68.
Series
- Alice, Girl from the Future: Kir Bulychev's most famous cycle, about the adventures of a schoolgirl who lives 100 years in The Future and travels around the galaxy with her father, meeting many strange creatures. Several movies and games have been made, the most famous one being Guest From the Future.
- Great Gusliar: Mundane Fantastic events in a city that is visited by aliens.
- Doctor Pavlysh: The adventures of a Badass doctor in space in The Future.
- Andrew Bruce: The adventures of an agent of the Space Navy, who uncovers conspiracies on alien planets. The Andrew Bruce adventures were written with more focus on moral dilemmas, and were based on the author's time in the Orient.
- Inter Galactic Police: A series about Kora Orvat, a Space Police agent who is a tougher She's All Grown Up version of Alice, Girl from the Future. The Inter Galactic Police would eventually Crossover into the main Alice, Girl from the Future continuity.
- Institute Of Expertise: A small series about an Extranormal Institute, whose heroes later appear in...
- Theater Of Shadows: A series of three books in which people visit and study an Alternate Universe.
- River Chronos: Alternate History Detective Drama novels in which the heroes use Time Travel to change events. They save the Tsar from assassination, develop the atomic bomb ten years early, and resurrect Lenin.
- Veryovkin: Speculative Fiction set in a Crapsack World city that is a sadder version of Great Gusliar.
- Ligon: Adventure series set in a Fictional Country based on the author's experiences in Burma.
Other books
- Crane In The Hands: A war in an Alternate Universe begins to interfere with our world.
- Abduction Of The Sorcerer: Aliens Time Travel to the past and take a scholar to The Future to save him from death. A girl named Anna is the witness to this abduction.
- Strange Memory: Professor Rzhevsky clones himself. The clone begins to investigate his purpose and the life of the professor.
- The City Above: After the End of a devastating war on a planet, archaeologists discover the survivors living in an Elaborate Underground Base that has become a brutal tyranny ruled by military and industrial oligarchs.
- Death On The Floor Below: The Soviet government covers up an environmental disaster. Written as a critique of Mikhail Gorbachev around the time of The Great Politics Mess-Up.
- The Mystery of Urulgan: A young English woman arrives in pre-Red October Siberia to search for a missing explorer and finds that a meteor is actually a crashed alien spaceship whose occupants are still frozen inside.
- Beloved: A few hundred years after an Alien Invasion by the Lizard Folk placed the Earth under the alien yoke, humans are treated as animals, while La Résistance fights to liberate the conquered planet.
- Asylum: Intended to be the first book in a series that would have been a Russian response to Harry Potter. The boy Seva has to save the fairy-tale characters by finding them a place to live. But Author Existence Failure prevented the series from taking off.
Stories
- People Are People
- Summer Morning
- Coral Castle
- Who Needs It
Other works
- Half a Life: A Short Story anthology.
- Earth And Elsewhere
- Those Who Survive
- The Last War
- Author Existence Failure: Died writing the series Asylum, which would have been a Russian response to Harry Potter.
- Casual Interstellar Travel
- The Future
- Girls Need Role Models: Many of his lead characters are strong women. Alisa Selezneva, Irina Gai, Kora Orvat, Veronica Smith, Peggy, Nina....
- Pen Name
- Raygun Gothic
- Redheaded Hero
- Science Hero
- Seadog Beard
- Standard Sci Fi Setting
- Take That: Often uses his works to criticize racism, classism, greed, violence, and depravity.
- Time Travel
- Write Who You Know
- ↑ A rarity in Soviet times