Yevgeny Borisovich Rein (Russian: Евгений Борисович Рейн; born 29 December 1935 in Leningrad,[1] now Saint Petersburg) is a Russian poet and writer, laureate of the State Prize of the Russian Federation (1997). His poetry won the Pushkin Prize of Russia, Tsarskoe Selo Art Prize (1997), or the Russian National Prize - the Poet (2012).
Yevgeny Rein | |
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Born | Yevgeny Borisovich Rein December 29, 1935 Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
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In 1960s, along with Joseph Brodsky, Dmitri Bobyshev, and Anatoly Naiman, he was one of the Akhmatova's Orphans, a well-known poetic group from Leningrad. Since 1979 Rein participated in the publication of "Metropol" almanac. His poems were published in samizdat and Soviet underground papers.
His first book was published in 1984 (The Names of Bridges) after a "careful" censorship. A well-known poet and free-thinker, the elder friend of Joseph Brodsky and Sergei Dovlatov, he became a member of Russian Writer's Union only in 1987, during perestroika.
Rein now lives in Moscow. He teaches at the Department of Literary Creativity at the Gorky Literary Institute.
Books
edit- Selected poems (preface by J. Brodsky, V. Kulle, M., SPb, 2001
- It's boring without Dovlatov, SPb, 1997
References
edit- ^ "Evgeny Rein". www.poetryinternational.com (in Dutch). Retrieved 2023-08-24.
External links
edit- Evgeny Rein on Poetry International Web
- Yevgeny Rein. Selected poems. Preface by Joseph Brodsky. Edited by Valentina Polukhina ISBN 1-85224-523-9
- Poetry by Yevgeny Rein (Russian)
- Yevgeny Rein at the wilsonquarterly.com
- The Independent Turn in Soviet-Era Russian Poetry: How Dmitry Bobyshev, Joseph Brodsky, Anatoly Naiman and Yevgeny Rein Became the 'Avvakumites' of Leningrad