Sneha Girap (Editor)

Vera Kamsha

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
Russian

Education
  
Lviv Polytechnic

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Vera Kamsha

Genre
  
Fantasy


Vera Kamsha httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
5 November 1962 (age 61) Lviv (
1962-11-05
)

Vera Viktorovna Kamsha (Russian: Вера Викторовна Камша; born November 5, 1962 in Lviv, Ukrainian SSR) is a Russian author of high fantasy and a journalist.

Contents

Vera Kamsha Vera Kamsha Wikipedia

Biography

Kamsha graduated from Lviv Polytechnic, after which she moved to Leningrad. At early 1990s she was involved in politics and worked in Lensoviet. From 1994 onwards she became a journalist.

The turning point in her career was her 2001 meeting with Nick Perumov, already a popular fantasy writer by the time. She interviewed him and the two found many similarities in taste (such as their love to Nikolai Gumilev's poetry). It was under Perumov's influence that Kamsha made first attempts to write and publish fantasy books.

In 2001, Kamsha's first novel, Dark Star (Russian: "Тёмная Звезда") was published by Eksmo. The book started Chronicles of Artsia series, a traditional Medieval high fantasy. Kamsha's later books, Gleams of Aeterna series in particular, were heavily influenced by George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire, as well as by Alexander Dumas's historical adventure novels. The series is set in a fantasy world resembling 17th-century Europe, with firearms and a strong church influence. The plot revolves around the power rivalry of two dynasties, where both sides have their flaws and neither is idealized. Recently she collaborated with Perumov on their alternate history novel Mlava Krasnaya (Mlava the Red).

First books of the Gleams of Aeterna series were translated to Polish and released by Wroclaw publisher Wydawnictwo Dolnośląskie.

Awards

  • Mir Fantastiki award for Lik Pobedy as the best fantasy novel of 2005.
  • Sword of Rumata award for Zimny Izlom (2008)
  • Roscon special award (2011)
  • References

    Vera Kamsha Wikipedia