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Sorokin, Vladimir, 1955-

LC control no.n 88624454
Descriptive conventionsrda
LC classificationPG3488.O66
Personal name headingSorokin, Vladimir, 1955-
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Variant(s)Сорокин, Владимир, 1955-
Sorokin, V. (Vladimir), 1955-
Sorokin, Vladimir Georgievich, 1955-
Sorokini, Vladimir, 1955-
Other standard no.000000012103921X
113821744
Q319839
Associated countryRussia (Federation)
Associated placeBerlin (Germany) Soviet Union
Birth date1955-08-07
Place of birthBykovo (Moscow, Russia)
Field of activityPolitical satire Postmodernism (Literature) Science fiction Cyberpunk fiction Alternative histories (Fiction) Underground literature--Soviet Union
Profession or occupationAuthors, Russian Novelists
Special noteNon-Latin script reference not evaluated.
URIs added to this record for the PCC URI MARC Pilot. Please do not remove or edit the URIs.
Found innuc88-38993: Ocheredʹ, 1985 (hdg. on MB rept.: Sorokin, V.; usage: V. Sorokin)
The queue, c1988: t.p. (Vladimir Sorokin) jkt. (b. in 1955)
Vladimir Sorokin, 1992: colophon (V.V. Sorokin)
Sobranie sochineniĭ v dvukh tomakh, c1998: t.p. (Vladimir Sorokin) colophon (Vladimir Georgievich Sorokin)
Kasack, W. Leksikon russkoĭ literatury XX veka, 1996: (Sorokin, Vladimir Georgievich, prose writer, dramatist, b. 1955 Bykovo, Mosk. Oblast; trained as an engineer but worked as artist-illustrator; early literary works published first only abroad; not pub. in USSR until 1989)
Goluboe salo, 1999: t.p. (Vladimir Sorokin) colophon (Vladimir Georgievich Sorokin)
Vikipedii︠a︡ (Russian), April 17, 2014 Vladimir Georgievich Sorokin (b. August 7, 1955)
His Rigši ; Tʻetʻri kvadrati, 2018: t.p. (Vladimir Sorokini)
New York times, 18 Apr. 2022: in an article entitled, "He envisioned dystopias. Now he fears living in one," on page C1 (Vladimir Sorokin; widely regarded as one of Russia's most inventive writers, an iconoclast who has chronicled the country's slide toward authoritarianism; he and his wife split their time between Vnukovo, a town outside Moscow, and a bright art-filled apartment in Berlin; celebrated as the literary heir to giants like Turgenev, Gogol and Nabokov; a master of mimicry and subverting genre tropes, veering from arch postmodern political satire ("The Queue"), to esoteric science fiction ("The Ice Trilogy") to alternate histories and futuristic cyberpunk fantasies ("Telluria"))
Associated languagerus
Invalid LCCNno 99060094 no 96009826