Tatyana Yesenina
Tatyana Sergeevna Yesenina (Russian: Татьяна Серге́евна Есенина; May 29, 1918 – May 6, 1992) was a Russian writer and the daughter of Sergei Yesenin and his second wife Zinaida Raikh.
Tatyana was raised in Moscow. She was exiled to Tashkent in 1941, after the murder of her mother by the NKVD.[1] In Tashkent, Tatyana worked as a journalist, producing many articles and sketches. She published a memoir of her father, The House on the Nikolsky Boulevard. Tatyana's novel Zhenya, the Wonder of the Twentieth Century was the only work of fiction she published in her lifetime, though she left other works in manuscript at her death.[1]
English translations
- Male Bonding Sessions, (extract from Zhenya, the Wonder of the Twentieth Century), from Anthology of Russian Women's Writing, 1777-1992, Oxford University Press, 1994. ISBN 0-19-871505-6
gollark: Also, you seem to mostly be defining global variables.
gollark: No.
gollark: What hello world program?
gollark: ... probably?
gollark: You add it to the dependencies in your cargo.toml.
References
- Kelly, Catriona (1994). Anthology of Russian Women's Writing, 1777-1992. Oxford University Press. p. 316. ISBN 0-19-871505-6.
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