Mikhail Gorlin

Mikhail Genrikhovich Gorlin (Russian: Михаи́л Ге́нрихович Го́рлин, IPA: [mʲɪxɐˈil ˈɡʲɛnrʲɪxəvʲɪtɕ ˈɡorlʲɪn] (listen); 1909-1943)[1] was a Russian emigre poet who founded the Berlin Poets' Club in 1928. He and his wife (the poet Raisa Blokh) later perished during World War II in a German concentration camp.

Publications

1936. Puteshestviia. Berlin: Petropolis. (Poems)

gollark: I don't really trust him.
gollark: School didn't restart here yet, but Boris Johnson is insisting that it's a "moral imperative" that everyone goes back and that it's totally safe for everyone.
gollark: My mother is a doctor, and warned me *against* going into medicine, although I forgot why.
gollark: It seems to just randomly change its mind every decade or so on stuff beyond "you lose weight if you burn more energy than you take in".
gollark: I'm not convinced that nutrition science... knows much.

References

  • Brian Boyd Vladimir Nabokov: The Russian Years. Princeton University Press, 1990.

Literary archives

Some of Gorlin's writings and correspondence are held in the Vladimir Korvin-Piotrovskii Papers at the Beinecke Library, Yale University.


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