LC control no. | n 88624454 |
---|---|
Descriptive conventions | rda |
LC classification | PG3488.O66 |
Personal name heading | Sorokin, Vladimir, 1955- |
Variant(s) | Сорокин, Владимир, 1955- Sorokin, V. (Vladimir), 1955- Sorokin, Vladimir Georgievich, 1955- Sorokini, Vladimir, 1955- |
Other standard no. | 000000012103921X 113821744 Q319839 |
Associated country | Russia (Federation) |
Associated place | Berlin (Germany) Soviet Union |
Birth date | 1955-08-07 |
Place of birth | Bykovo (Moscow, Russia) |
Field of activity | Political satire Postmodernism (Literature) Science fiction Cyberpunk fiction Alternative histories (Fiction) Underground literature--Soviet Union |
Profession or occupation | Authors, Russian Novelists |
Special note | Non-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 in | nuc88-38993: 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 language | rus |
Invalid LCCN | no 99060094 no 96009826 |