Victoria Amelina
Victoria Amelina | |
---|---|
Born | Lviv, Ukrainian SSR | 1 January 1986
Occupation | novelist, essayist |
Nationality | Ukrainian |
Genre | Ukrainian literature |
Literary movement | member of PEN International |
Notable works | Fall Syndrome (2014), Dom's Dream Kingdom (2017) |
Notable awards | European Union Prize for Literature short-list |
Website | |
vamelina |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Victoria Amelina. |
Victoria Amelina (Ukrainian: Вікторія Амеліна) (born 1986) is a Ukrainian novelist. She is the author of two successful novels and a children´s book.
Biography[]
Victoria Amelina was born in 1986 in Lviv, at fourteen she emigrated with her family to Canada, but later she has returned to Ukraine. After finishing her degree in computer sciences, she spent, in her own words, “alien thirteen years” building a career in international hi-tech business. Since 2015, when her first book Синдром листопаду, або Homo Compatiens (The Fall Syndrom: about Homo Compatiens) was published, she dedicates her time only to writing. Her debut novel deals with the events at Maidan in 2014, and the foreword was written by a famous writer Jurij Izdryk. The novel has received several literary awards, was welcomed by critics and scholars both from Ukraine and Europe.[1][2]
In 2016, Amelina published a book for children called Хтось, або водяне серце (Someone, or Water Heart).
In 2017, Victoria Amelina published a novel Дім для Дома (Dom's Dream Kingdom) about a family of a Soviet colonel who in the 90s lived in the apartment of the famous Polish author of Jewish origin Stanisław Lem.[3][4][5][6]
The novel Дім для Дома (Dom's Dream Kingdom) was short-listed for a prestigious literary award LitAkcent in 2017[7] and European Union Prize for Literature in 2019.[8]
Amelina is a member of PEN International. In 2018, she took part in 84th World PEN Congress in India as a delegate from Ukraine and gave a speech on Ukrainian political prisoner in Russia Oleg Sentsov.[9]
Texts by Amelina have been translated into Czech, Dutch, Polish, German and English languages.
References[]
- ^ "Eastern partnership literary review 2015/ 2". Issuu.com. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
- ^ "Empathy – the only thing that will save us : anthropology of Homo Compatiens in the novel of Victoria Amelina". Aesthetic-potential.com. 1 December 2015. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
- ^ "Amelina Victoria". PEN Ukraine. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
- ^ Szablatura, Martin. "Victoria Amelina: Pouze literatura | MAČ2017". brno.mac365.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 10 May 2019.
- ^ "Wrocław in the City of Lem. The beginning of an international seminar". Wroclaw2016.pl. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
- ^ https://www.huri.harvard.edu/projects/ukraine-crisis-archive/119-online-forms/272-fellows-associates-alumni-update.html
- ^ Szablatura, Martin. "Victoria Amelina: Pouze literatura | MAČ2017". brno.mac365.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 10 May 2019.
- ^ "EUPL 2019 shortlisted candidates — European Union Prize for Literature". www.euprizeliterature.eu. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
- ^ ""The stories win people's minds, not bullets": Victoria Amelina's speech about the trial of Sentsov at the 84th PEN Congress in Pune". PEN Ukraine. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
External links[]
- Biography of Victoria Amelina at PEN International (Ukrainian branch) website
- Review of Victoria Amelina's Fall Syndrome novel in Ukrainian-German Slavic Studies project site
- Review of Victoria Amelina's novel in Eastern Partnership Literary Review magazine by Czech scholar Tereza Chlaňová, PhD
- An excerpt from the novel The Fall Syndrome by Victoria Amelina in Apofenie literary magazine
- Victoria Amelina's speech on political prisoner Oleg Sentsov at the 84th World PEN International Congress in Pune, India
- Victoria Amelina's column about Russian-Ukrainian war in Donbas affecting her family
- Victoria Amelina's essay reflecting on the dramatic history of Ukraine including the Holocaust and Holodomor
- Victoria Amelina's novel short-listed for European Union Prize for Literature
- 1986 births
- Living people
- Writers from Lviv
- Ukrainian women novelists