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Vardges Petrosyan

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Occupation
  
writer

Name
  
Vardges Petrosyan

Nationality
  
Armenian

Role
  
Writer

Alma mater
  
Yerevan University

Genre
  
fiction and drama


Vardges Petrosyan dgrassetscomauthors1249293265p53005184jpg

Born
  
August 9, 1932Ashtarak, Soviet Armenia (
1932-08-09
)

Died
  
April 15, 1994, Yerevan, Armenia

Education
  
Yerevan State University

Vardges petrosyan top 8 facts


Vardges Petrosyan (Armenian: Վարդգես Պետրոսյան) (August 9, 1932 – April 15, 1994) was an Armenian writer of fiction and drama.

Contents

Vardges Petrosyan wwwmagaghatamwpcontentuploads201408Vardges

Vardges Petrosyan, a prominent novelist, playwright and essayist was born in 1932 in the town of Ashtarak, where he spent his childhood years, finished school and began writing his first verses.

In 1954, he graduated from the Yerevan University and started writing for several youth newspapers. As a newspaper correspondent he travelled all over his native Armenia and throughout the entire Soviet Union—from 'Yakutia in Eastern Siberia to Karelia in the northwest of the country.

His first collection of poems, "The Ballad of Mens", came out in 1958, to be followed by collections of essays, feature stories and tales.

Vardges Petrosyan is best known for his novels "The Last Teacher", "Letters from the Small Stations of Childhood", "The Ani Drugstore", "The Armenian Sketches" and also for his play "The Heavy Weight of Hippocrates' Hat". Petrosyan is a winner of the Armenian Republic's State Prize and Komsomol Prize.

In 1966, he became the editor-in-chief of an Armenian youth monthly "Garun" (Spring) where he worked till 1975 when he was elected the First Secretary of the Board of Writers' Union of Armenia.

Among his published books (in Armenian) that are found in US libraries according to WorldCat are:

  • Petrosyan, Vardges. Storagrutʻyan pativě. Haykakan ēskʻizner—Vardges Petrosyan" himnadram, Matenashar, tʻiv 1. Erevan: "Van Aryan", 2000. ISBN 978-99930-57-20-8
  • Petrosyan, Vardges. Ěntir erker: erku hatorov. Erevan: "Sovetakan Grogh" Hratarakchʻutʻyun, 1983.
  • One story only has been translated into English, as "The solitary hazel tree" by Vardges Petrosyan in Soviet literature. no. 5 (422) (1983) ISSN 0202-1870

    Vardges petrosyan himnakan dproc


    References

    Vardges Petrosyan Wikipedia