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Nikolai Teleshov

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Name
  
Nikolai Teleshov


Role
  
Writer

Nikolai Teleshov

Born
  
November 10, 1867 Moscow, Russia (
1867-11-10
)

Died
  
March 14, 1957, Moscow, Russia

Books
  
A Writer Remembers: Reminiscences

Nikolai Dmitryevich Teleshov (Russian: Никола́й Дми́триевич Телешо́в) (November 10, 1867 - March 14, 1957) was a Russian/Soviet writer.

Contents

Nikolai Teleshov Nikolai Teleshov Wikipedia

Biography

Teleshov was born in Moscow where his father was a merchant. His poems were first published in 1884. In the 1880s and 1890s he wrote short stories and novellas, including the story he's best known for, The Duel. He also wrote sketches and stories portraying the disastrous fate of resettled peasants in Siberia.

In 1899 Teleshov organized a literary circle in Moscow known as the Sreda (Wednesday) literary gathering. Among its members were many of Russia's most popular writers, such as Maxim Gorky and the future Nobel Laureate Ivan Bunin. Teleshov also participated in publishing the collections of the Znanie association, managed by Gorky.

After 1917 he worked for the People's Commissariat for Education and other Soviet institutions. During the Soviet years his most significant works included The Beginning of the End (1933), a novella of the Russian Revolution of 1905–07, and his creative memoirs A Writer Remembers (1925–43). He died in 1957 and was buried at the Novodevichy Cemetery.

English translations

  • The Duel, Short Story Classics (Foreign) Vol 1, Patten, Collier, NY, 1907. from Archive.org
  • A Writer Remembers, Hutchinson, NY, 1943.
  • References

    Nikolai Teleshov Wikipedia