Names program. He has published three novels: Moscow Umbrellas (Moskovskie zontiki), We’re Gone (Nas ne byvaet), and Far from Wrigley Gulf (Vdali ot zaliva Rigli).
LUDMILLA PETRUSHEVSKAYA was born in Moscow in 1938. Her first work was published in 1972, only to be followed by almost ten years of officially enforced silence, when her plays and prose were censored. Petrushevskaya’s novel The Time: Night (Vremya noch’) was short-listed for the 1992 Russian Booker Prize and translated into more than thirty languages. Since then, Petrushevskaya has published over thirty books of prose, and her award-winning plays are produced around the world.
SERGEI SAMSONOV was born in 1980 in Podolsk. He works as a copywriter in a Moscow publishing house and contributes to the Ex Libris NG book review. His first novel, Legs (Nogi), was translated into Italian. His second novel, The Kamlaev Anomaly (Anomalia Kamlaeva), was short-listed for the National Best Seller Prize. Samsonov’s most recent novel, Oxygenic Limit (Kislorodny predel), was published in 2009.
GLEB SHULPYAKOV was born in 1971. His first collection of poems, The Flick, was published in 2001 and won the Triumph Prize. He is the author of the novels The Sinan Book (Kniga Sinana) and Tsunami, and contributes essays and criticism to Russian periodicals. He has translated the poetry of Ted Hughes and Robert Hass into Russian, as well as W.H. Auden’s essays. Shulpyakov is currently an editor at the literary magazine New Youth. He lives in Moscow.
NATALIA SMIRNOVA was born in 1978 in Moscow. After studying law and working as a lawyer, she moved to St. Petersburg to work as a foreign rights manager for a publisher. In 2006 she cofounded the Goumen & Smirnova Literary Agency, with Julia Goumen, representing Russian authors worldwide.
ANNA STAROBINETS is a journalist and scriptwriter. Her collection of short stories An Awkward Age (Perekhodny vozrast) has been translated into several languages. She is also the author of the novel Refuge 3/9 (Ubezhische 3/9) and the short story collection Cold Spell (Rezkoe pokholodanie). All of her works have been nominated for the National Best Seller Prize. She lives in Moscow with her husband and daughter.
VLADIMIR TUCHKOV, born in 1949, is an international correspondent for Vesti.ru, an online newspaper. His books have been short-listed for the Andrei Bely Prize and twice for the Anti-Booker Prize. His cyberpunk novel The Dancer (Tantsor) has drawn tremendous acclaim.
IGOR ZOTOV was born in Moscow in 1955. He has worked at the newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta for more than ten years, including as deputy editor in chief. He founded and for five years ran the book supplement Ex Libris NG. He is the author of two books and several hundred articles published in the Russian and foreign media.