Viktor Nikitin (writer)

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Viktor Nikolaevich Nikitin (15 November 1960 – 30 September 2020) was a Russian writer, playwright and editor. He was a member of the Union of writers of Russia.[1]

Biography

Nikitin graduated from the Voronezh Institute of Civil Engineering in the road traffic department. He lived in Voronezh and worked in his early years as a prose editor in the magazine Pod"yom; from 2005 to 2015, he was the editor of the prose department of the «Russkiy pereplot» portal.

Writing career

Nikitin started writing in 1986 (when his first story, Clever, was published in the Voronezh newspaper Molodoy Kommunar). His works were published in the magazines Rise, Moscow, Zvezda, Our Contemporary, October, Siberian Lights, Russian Echo, Gates of Siberia, Don, North, Russian Federation today; and in the newspapers Komsomolskaya Pravda, Literaturnaya Gazeta, Uchitelskaya Gazeta, Rossiyskiy Pisatel, Interpol-Express and others. He wrote stories, essays, and plays, including Open / Closed, 2004; Viva Stalin!, 2006; Drinking with Chekhov, 2006;[2][3] A horse has hooves, a man has legs, 2007; Death of the Middle Class, 2008; Afternoon Cruel Disappointment, 2009; and the novel Songs of the Working Class, published in 2011.[2][4]

The main theme of his work was the impossibility of the presence of a traditional person in the modern world, with a place for "black humor" and mysticism, irony and sarcasm, satire and grotesque.

His 2005 novel Will Disappear Like Birds was a complex, multifaceted work about the life of a "superfluous person" in the Soviet era, and then in democratic market times, saturated with allusions and presenting a phantasmagoric picture of an unstable world.[5]

Death

Nikitin died from COVID-19 in Voronezh, on 30 September 2020, aged 59, during the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia.[6][7][8]

Selected works

Awards and recognition

  • Prize of the "Russian binding" portal - "for the best story published in 2001"
  • Prize of the "Rise" magazine - "for works published in 2001–2002"
  • Prize "Russian binding" (2005) - "for the novel" Disappear like birds "
  • Prize "Russian speech" of the magazine "Rise" (2003) - "for stories published in the magazine in 2001–2003."
  • Prize "Russian Binding" (2011) - "for the play "Songs of the Working Class"".
  • Prize "Native Speech" (2013) - for the best prose in 2012 (the stories "Life in the Other Way" and "House with Green Balconies").
  • Prize "Koltsovsky Krai" (2016) - for journalism.
  • Prize "Koltsovsky Krai" (2017) - for prose (story "The Mother of God of All Sleepers").
  • Prize "Koltsovsky Territory" (2018) - for the book "Life in the Other Side".

References

  1. ^ "Никитин Виктор Николаевич". Литераторы — члены воронежского отделения СПР. Официальный сайт Воронежского отделения Союза писателей России. Archived from the original on 2013-04-17. Retrieved 2013-02-08.
  2. ^ a b "Никитин Виктор". Некоммерческий Фонд «Всероссийский драматургический конкурс „Действующие лица“». Retrieved 2013-02-08.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "/nikitin02nov04.html Open / Closed". pereplet.ru. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  4. ^ "Виктор Никитин - Песни рабочего класса". pereplet.ru. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  5. ^ "Обновление имен (Вступительная статья о дебютантах А. Воронцова) (Наш современник || N3 2005)". nash-sovremennik.ru. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  6. ^ "В Воронеже умер писатель Виктор Никитин. Последние свежие новости Воронежа и области - РИА Воронеж". riavrn.ru. 30 September 2020. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  7. ^ "В Воронеже от коронавируса умер писатель Виктор Никитин - последние новости Воронежа и области на сегодня - главные и свежие события в городе за неделю на официальном сайте СМИ - Интернет-канал "TV Губерния"". tv-gubernia.ru. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  8. ^ "Заразившийся коронавирусом писатель Виктор Никитин умер в Воронеже". De Facto. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  9. ^ "Publishing plans for 2013". Official site of the Voronezh branch of the Writers' Union Russia. Archived from the original on 2013-03-07. Retrieved 2013-02-08.

External links