Andrey Kurkov Explained

Andrey Kurkov
Birth Date: df=y 23 April 1961
Birth Place:Leningrad, Soviet Union
Nationality:Ukrainian
Education:Kyiv Foreign Languages Institute
Occupation:Writer

Andrey Yuryevich Kurkov (Ukrainian: Андрій Юрійович Курков|Andrii Yuriiovych Kurkov; Russian: Андре́й Ю́рьевич Курко́в; born 23 April 1961) is a Ukrainian[1] [2] author and public intellectual who writes in Russian and Ukrainian. He is the author of 19 novels, including the bestselling Death and the Penguin, nine books for children, and about 20 documentary, fiction and TV movie scripts. His work is currently translated into 37 languages, including English, Spanish, Japanese, French, German, Italian, Chinese, Swedish, Persian and Hebrew, and published in 65 countries.[3] Kurkov, who has long been a respected commentator on Ukraine for the international media, notably in Europe and the United States, has written assorted articles for various publications worldwide. His books are full of black humour, post-Soviet reality and elements of surrealism.

Life and works

Kurkov's father was a test pilot and his mother was a doctor. When he was just 2 his family relocated to Kyiv in connection with his father's work.[4] He started writing at the age of seven[5] when, after the death of two of his three pet hamsters, he wrote a poem about the loneliness of the remaining pet. He also produced poetry about Lenin, purportedly inspired by his Soviet education at the time.

Having graduated in 1983 from the Kyiv Foreign Languages Institute, as a trained Japanese translator Kurkov was assigned military service assisting the KGB.[4] However, he managed to get his papers changed to service with the military police. This offered him a greater degree of freedom during and after his service period. He was assigned a prison guard position in Odessa. It was during this period that Kurkov wrote all of his children's stories.

His first novel was published two weeks before the fall of the Soviet Union, and in the ensuing social and political turmoil he made the first steps towards self-publishing and distribution. Borrowing money from friends to fund his work, Kurkov managed to publish independently.[4] While organising distribution around Ukraine, he would also sell copies by hand from stalls on busy streets.

Like many successful writers, Kurkov had difficulty getting his first publishing contract. He reportedly received 500 rejections before being accepted, at which time he had written almost eight complete novels.

Later in his career, he won acclaim as one of the most successful Ukrainian authors in the post-Soviet era and has been featured on European bestseller lists. His novel The Bickford Fuse (published in 2009 in Russian, and in Boris Dralyuk's English-language translation in 2016 by MacLehose Press) was characterised by Sam Leith in The Financial Times as "a sort of cross between The Pilgrim's Progress, Catch-22, Heart of Darkness and Cormac McCarthy's The Road, with a faint shading, here and there, of Samuel Beckett: an insistently dreamlike absurdist satire shaped by the vastness of Russia's landmass and the insanity of its Soviet-era ideology",[6] and reviewed by The Guardian as a "genre-defying work, fusing picaresque adventure with post-apocalyptic parable", while Kurkov himself called it "the dearest and most important of all my works".[7] [8] He has been described by Ian Sansom as "a serious writer never more serious than when he's being funny about unfunny things, and with a whole lifetime of unfunny things to be serious about."[9]

In 2018, he was elected as the President of PEN Ukraine.[10]

Kurkov's novel Grey Bees, which has "elements of both the fable and the epic",[11] dramatises the conflict in his country through the adventures of a beekeeper.[12] The novel was translated into French by Paul Lequesne as Les abeilles grises, which won the 2022 Prix Médicis étranger,[13] and into English by Boris Dralyuk, winning the inaugural Gregg Barrios Book in Translation Prize from the National Book Critics Circle.[14]

In 2024, Kurkov released The Silver Bone, the first in a new series of detective novels titled "The Kyiv Mysteries". The second book The Stolen Heart will be published in 2025.[15] He is in the process of writing the third book The Public Sauna Case.[16]

Kurkov lives in Kyiv with his English wife, Elizabeth, and their three children. After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, he became an internally displaced person and continued to write and broadcast about the war.[17] A bilingual, native Russian speaker, in a 2022 interview Kurkov speculated that Russia’s war on Ukraine, rather than suppress Ukrainian culture and identity, would potentially have the opposite effect, encouraging Ukrainian writers, especially those whose native language is Russian, to publish increasingly, or even exclusively, in Ukrainian.[18]

Bibliography

Novels translated into English:

Book NameISBNPublication YearTranslator
Death and the Penguin[19] 2001George Bird
Penguin Lost[20] 2005George Bird
A Matter of Death and Life[21] 2005George Bird
The Case of the General's Thumb[22] 2009George Bird
The President's Last Love[23] 2009Random House Publishing
The Good Angel of Death[24] 2010Andrew Bromfield
The Milkman in the Night[25] 2011Amanda Love Darragh
The Gardener from Ochakov[26] 2013Amanda Love Darragh
The Bickford Fuse[27] 2016Boris Dralyuk
Grey Bees[28] 2020Boris Dralyuk
Jimi Hendrix Live in Lviv[29] 2023Reuben Woolley
The Silver Bone[30] 2024[31] Boris Dralyuk
The Stolen Heart[32] 2025Boris Dralyuk
Non-fiction published in English:
!Book Name!ISBN!Publication Year
[33] ISBN 97818465594712014
Diary of an Invasion[34] ISBN 97816460528122022
Our Daily War[35] 2024

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://krytyka.com/ua/solutions/podcasts/audio/podkast-krytyky-andriy-kurkov-ya-ukrayinskyy-pysmennyk Подкаст Критики. Андрій Курков: «Я — український письменник» (1:30-2:00 хвилина)
  2. http://www.radiosvoboda.org/content/article/24949786.html Андрій Курков: Мене обізвали публічно «українським націоналістом, який пише російською мовою»
  3. Web site: Radio Liberty interview with Andrey Kurkov. 7 April 2013 . 1 October 2015. Radiosvoboda.org . Vannek . Ludmila .
  4. News: Nicholas Wroe. A life in books: Andrey Kurkov. The Guardian. 30 July 2011. 21 October 2015.
  5. Web site: 'A book is like a battery that passes on energy'. Pooja. Bhula. The Hindu Business Line. 13 March 2022. 10 April 2020.
  6. News: 'The Bickford Fuse', by Andrey Kurkov. Financial Times. Sam. Leith. 29 April 2016. 16 February 2019.
  7. Web site: The Bickford Fuse by Andrey Kurkov review – a Soviet Pilgrim's Progress. Phoebe. Taplin. 13 May 2016. 16 February 2019. The Guardian.
  8. Web site: The Bickford Fuse by Andrey Kurkov. hackwriters.com The International Writers Magazine. Charlie. Dickinson. May 2017. 13 March 2022.
  9. Andrey Kurkov's The Bickford Fuse is a satirical masterpiece. 14 May 2016. The Spectator. Ian. Sansom. Ian Sansom. 16 February 2019.
  10. Web site: Andrii Kurkov – PEN Ukraine's New President. Pen.org.ua. 17 December 2018. 29 January 2019. 30 January 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190130000349/http://pen.org.ua/en/novym-prezydentom-ukrayinskogo-pen-stav-andrij-kurkov/. dead.
  11. Web site: Apiculture. Uilleam. Blacker. TLS. 5 February 2021. 13 March 2022.
  12. Web site: Grey Bees. Hachette.
  13. Lépine. Elise. 8 November 2022. Prix Médicis étranger – Andreï Kourkov récompensé pour Les Abeilles grises. Le Point. fr. 11 November 2022.
  14. Web site: Announcing the 2022 NBCC Award Winners.
  15. Web site: MacLehose Press scoops two novels in Kurkov's Kyiv Mysteries series . 2024-05-31 . The Bookseller . En.
  16. Web site: The Silver Bone by Andrey Kurkov – droll detective work in revolutionary Kyiv . The Guardian . 27 March 2024.
  17. Web site: Letter from Ukraine . BBC Radio 4 . 13 March 2022.
  18. Web site: Ukrainian novelist Andrey Kurkov on preserving his country’s culture during war. Brown. Jeffrey. April 11, 2022. PBS.org/newshour. PBS. 2022-04-15.
  19. Web site: Death and the Penguin . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  20. Web site: Penguin Lost . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  21. Web site: A Matter of Death and Life . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  22. Web site: The Case of the General's Thumb . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  23. Web site: The President's Last Love . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  24. Web site: The Good Angel of Death . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  25. Web site: The Milkman in the Night . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  26. Web site: The Gardener from Ochakov . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  27. Web site: The Bickford Fuse . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  28. Web site: Grey Bees . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  29. Web site: Jimi Hendrix Live in Lviv . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  30. Web site: The Silver Bone (The Kyiv Mysteries, #1) . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  31. Web site: The Silver Bone. MacLehose Press.
  32. Web site: MacLehose Press scoops two novels in Kurkov's Kyiv Mysteries series . 2024-05-31 . The Bookseller . En.
  33. Web site: Ukraine Diaries . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  34. Web site: Diary of an Invasion . 2024-05-31 . Goodreads . en.
  35. Book: Our Daily War . 2024-07-18 . 978-1-916788-68-8 . en.