Dovlatov, Sergey Donatovich
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Sergey Dovlatov
Date of birth: September 3, 1941 (1941-09-03) [1]
Place of birth: Ufa, Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, RSFSR, USSR
Date of death: August 24 1990(1990-08-24)[1][2] (48 years)
Place of death: New York, United States of America[1]
Citizenship (citizenship): USSR
USA
Occupation: writer, journalist
Language of works: Russian [3]
sergeidovlatov.com Works on the site Lib.ru Files on Wikimedia Commons
Sergey Donatovich Dovlatov (according to his passport - Dovlatov Mechik; September 3, 1941, Ufa — August 24, 1990, New York) was a Soviet and American writer and journalist.
Content
1 Biography 1.1 Personal life
2 Works 2.1 Lifetime editions 2.2 Some posthumous editions 2.3 Film adaptations of works 2.4 Correspondence between Dovlatov and Efimov
3 Addresses in Leningrad 4 Memory of Dovlatov 5 Cultural influence 6 Alcoholism 7 Notes 8 Literature 9 References
Biography[edit / edit wiki text]
Sergey Dovlatov was born on September 3, 1941 in Ufa, in the family of theater director[5] Donat Isaakovich Mechik (1909-1995), a Jew, and actress, and later proofreader Nora Stepanovna Dovlatova (1908-1999), an Armenian.
His parents were evacuated to the capital of the Bashkir ASSR with the outbreak of the war and lived for three years in the house of NKVD officers at 56 Gogol Street.
Since 1944, he lived in Leningrad.
In 1959, he entered the Finnish Language department of the Philological Faculty of Leningrad State University and studied there for two and a half years[6].
He communicated with the Leningrad poets Evgeny Rein[7], Anatoly Naiman, Joseph Brodsky and the writer Sergei Wolf ("The Invisible Book"), the artist Alexander Nezhdanov.
He was expelled from the university for poor academic performance.
He served for three years in the internal troops in the protection of correctional colonies in the Komi Republic (Chinyavoryk village) According to Brodsky's memoirs[8], Dovlatov returned from the army "like Tolstoy from the Crimea, with a scroll of stories and some dazed look in his eyes."
Dovlatov entered the Faculty of Journalism of LSU, worked in the student's multi edition of the Leningrad Shipbuilding Institute "For personnel to shipyards", wrote short stories.
After the institute, he worked in the newspaper" Banner of Progress " LOMO[9][10].
He was invited to the group "Citizens", founded by Maramzin, Efimov, Vakhtin and Gubin[11].
He worked as a literary secretary of Vera Panova[12].
From September 1972 to March 1975, he lived in the Estonian SSR.
To obtain a Tallinn residence permit, he worked for about two months as a stoker in a boiler room, at the same time being a freelance correspondent for the newspaper "Soviet Estonia".
Later, he was employed in the weekly newspaper "Sailor of Estonia" published by the Estonian Shipping Company, holding the position of executive secretary.
He was a freelance employee of the city newspaper "Evening Tallinn" [13].
In the summer of 1972, he was hired in the information department of the newspaper "Soviet Estonia".
In his stories included in the book "Compromise", Dovlatov describes stories from his journalistic practice as a correspondent of "Soviet Estonia", and also tells about the work of the editorial office and the life of his fellow journalists.
The set of his first book "Five Corners" in the publishing house "Eesti Raamat" was destroyed on the instructions of the KGB of the Estonian SSR[14].
He worked as a tour guide in the Pushkin Nature Reserve near Pskov (Mikhailovskoye).
In 1975, he returned to Leningrad.
He worked in the magazine "Koster" [15].
He wrote prose.
Magazines rejected his works.
A short story on the production topic "Interview" was published in 1974 in the magazine "Yunost" [16].
Dovlatov published in samizdat, as well as in the emigrant magazines "Continent", "Time and We"[17].
In 1976, he was expelled from the Union of Journalists of the USSR.
In August 1978, due to the persecution of the authorities, Dovlatov emigrated from the USSR, settled in the Forest Hills area of New York, where he became the editor in chief of the weekly newspaper "New American".
Members of its editorial board were Boris Metter, Alexander Genis, Peter Weil, ballet and theater photographer Nina Alovert, poet and essayist Grigory Ryskin and others.
The newspaper quickly gained popularity in the emigrant environment.
One after another, books of his prose were published.
By the mid 1980s, he had achieved great readership success, published in the prestigious magazines "Partisan Review" and "The New Yorker".
During the twelve years of emigration, he published twelve books in the United States and Europe.
In the USSR, the writer was known for samizdat and the author's program on Radio Liberty.
Sergey Dovlatov died on August 24, 1990 in New York from heart failure.
He was buried at the Mount Hebron Jewish Cemetery in the New York borough of Queens[18].
Personal life[edit / edit wiki text]
Sergey Dovlatov was officially married twice.
First wife: Asya Pekurovskaya, the marriage lasted from 1960 to 1968.
In 1970, after the divorce, she had a daughter — Maria Pekurovskaya, now vice president of the advertising department of the Universal Pictures film company[19].
In 1973, they emigrated from the USSR to the United States.
Actual wife: Tamara Zibunova[20].
Daughter Alexandra (born 1975).
Second wife: Elena Dovlatova (nee. Ritman)[21].
Daughter Ekaterina (born 1966).
Son Nikolai (Nicholas Dooley; born 1984), was born in the United States.
Works[edit / edit wiki text]
Lifetime editions[edit / edit wiki text]
Dovlatov did not allow any text published in the USSR before 1978 to be reprinted under any circumstances[22].
List of books published with his direct or indirect participation:
The Invisible Book — Ann Arbor: Ardis Publishing, 1977 Solo on Underwood: Notebooks — Paris: The Third Wave, 1980 Compromise — New York: The Silver Age, 1981 Zone: Notes of the Overseer — Ann Arbor: The Hermitage, 1982 Reserve — Ann Arbor: The Hermitage, 1983 March of the Lonely — Holyoke: New England Publishing, 1983 Ours — Ann Arbor: Ardis Publishing, 1983 Solo on Underwood: Notebooks — 2nd expanded edition — Holyoke: New England Publishing, 1983 Demarche of Enthusiasts (co — authors Vagrich Bakhchanyan, Naum Sagalovsky) - Paris: Syntax, 1985 Craft: A story in two parts Ann Arbor: Ardis Publishing, 1985 The Foreigner — New York: Russica Publishing, 1986 The suitcase Tenafly: Hermitage, 1986 The Presentation — New York: Russica Publishing, 1987 He only Brodsky: Russian culture in portraits and anecdotes (co author Maria Volkova) - New York: Slovo, 1990 Notebooks — New York:
Slovo, 1990 Branch New York: Slovo, 1990
Some posthumous editions[edit / edit wiki text]
Nature Reserve L.: Vasilievsky Island, 1990.
Zone; Compromise; Nature Reserve Moscow: PIK, 1991.
Sergey Dovlatov.
Collection of prose in three volumes, illustrations by Alexander Florensky, 3 volumes.
- Limbus press, St. Petersburg, 1995 — - ISBN 5-8370-0307 X..
Sergey Dovlatov.
Little known Dovlatov.
Collection, illustrations by Alexander Florensky.
- JSC "Zvezda Magazine", St. Petersburg, 1995 — - ISBN 5-7439-0021-3 ..
Sergey Dovlatov.
Collected works, 4 volumes.
- ABC Classics, St. Petersburg, 2003-2004 — - ISBN 5-352-00079-6..
Reading Lessons.
Philological prose.
- St. Petersburg: Azbuka, 2010.
- 384 p.
- ISBN 978-5-9985-0845-5.
(The first commented edition of notebooks and essays on literature) S. Dovlatov.
Life and opinions.
Selected correspondence.
St. Petersburg: Zvezda Magazine, 2011.
384 p., 5000 copies, ISBN 978-5-7439-0156-2 Dovlatov S.
The last book: Stories, articles.
- St. Petersburg: Azbuka, Azbuka Atticus, 2011.
- 608 p. + incl. (16 p.), ISBN 978-5-389-02233-1
Film adaptation of works[edit / edit wiki text]
1992 — "In a straight line", dir.
Sergey Chliyants based on the stories of S. Dovlatov 1992 - "Comedy of strict regime", dir.
Viktor Studennikov and Mikhail Grigoriev film adaptation of a fragment of the work "Zone" 2015 — "The End of the Beautiful Era", dir.
Stanislav Govorukhin — film adaptation of the short story collection "Compromise".
Correspondence between Dovlatov and Efimov[edit / edit wiki text]
In 2001, the publishing house "Zakharov" published the book "Sergey Dovlatov Igor Efimov.
An epistolary novel"[23].
The book covers the correspondence between Dovlatov and Efimov from 1979 to 1989.
Several publishing houses, to which Yefimov approached with a proposal to publish the book, refused to do so because of copyright considerations.
Dovlatov opposed the publication of his letters during his lifetime, as he mentions in one of his letters to Efimov.
The Dovlatov family, first of all the widow of the writer Elena Dovlatov, who is the owner of the copyright to everything written by Dovlatov, in accordance with his will, also objected to the publication of letters[24].
Zakharov's publishing house decided to publish the correspondence, arguing that the publisher's responsibility to readers is greater than its responsibility to the Dovlatov family.
However, Elena Dovlatova, along with her daughter Katerina, managed to prove their rights to correspondence in a Russian court and get a ban on the publication of the book a year after the sale of the entire circulation of 15 thousand copies.
The court refused Elena Dovlatova's demand to destroy all the released copies of the book.
the source is not specified 123 days]
Addresses in Leningrad[edit / edit wiki text]
1944-1972 Rubinstein Street, 23; 1975-1978 Rubinstein Street, 22.
There is a page on the topic in Wikicitatnik
Dovlatov, Sergey Donatovich
The memory of Dovlatov[edit / edit wiki text]
Dovlatov's grave at Mount Hebron Cemetery in New York, July 26, 2010
On September 3, 2007, at 15: 00 in St. Petersburg, on Rubinstein Street, house 23, a solemn ceremony of opening a memorial plaque to the writer took place.
The author of the memorial plaque is Alexey Arkhipov, a member of the Union of Artists of Russia.
The opening ceremony of the memorial plaque was attended by cultural figures, artists, members of the city government.
The widow of the writer Elena Dovlatov and his daughter Katerina, the head of the International Sergei Dovlatov Foundation, came to the northern capital to participate in the ceremony[25].
On September 3, 2003, a memorial plaque was installed in Tallinn in honor of Sergei Dovlatov on the wall of the house No. 41 on Vabriku Street (until the early 1990s — I. V. Rabchinsky Street), where the writer lived in apartment No. 4 for almost three years (1972-1975).
The bronze cast board is a book spread, where on the left there is a through text, and on the right there is a through stylized image of the writer taking his beloved fox terrier dog Glasha for a walk.
The image is based on a drawing by Alexander Florensky from the famous St. Petersburg group of artists "Mitki", who illustrated Dovlatov's" Collection of Prose in 3 volumes "(Limbus Press publishing house).
The memorial plaque, made by the Estonian sculptor Irina Ryatsepp, was installed on the initiative and at the expense of the Estonian public committee "Dovlatov memo" with partial financial support from the Moscow government and the Yuri Dolgoruky Moscow Foundation for International Cooperation[26].
The literary Dovlatov Prize, awarded by the Zvezda magazine, is named in honor of Sergei Dovlatov.
In 2008, the gallery project "Nevsky Tower" and the studio of manual printing "B&F" released an album of prints "Drawings by A. Florensky to the works of Sergei Dovlatov", dedicated to the 15th anniversary of the publication of the first three volume writer with illustrations by Alexander Florensky.
This three volume book, which was printed throughout the 90s, became a symbol of the writer's mass popularity.
In 2011, for the anniversary of the writer, a series of prints "Dovlatov's Neighborhood" was released based on the dust jackets for the same publication.
In 2011, the Azbuka publishing house was preparing to release an anniversary album of photos dedicated to the 70th anniversary of the birth of S. Dovlatov, compiled from the works of Nina Alovert, but lack of funds postponed the implementation of this project.
In 2011-2012, as part of the Dovlatov Days — 2011, an exhibition project "Dovlatov's Neighborhood" was held, dedicated to the 70th anniversary of the writer.
Exhibitions of Alexander Florensky's prints for the first three (four)volumes were held in all Dovlatov places: Leningrad, Tallinn, Pushkin Mountains and New York.
In one of their songs, the Russian band "Ellipsis" mentions the name of Sergei Dovlatov as "not willing to put up".
The house Museum of the writer Sergei Dovlatov in the Pushkin Mountains opened on September 3, 2011.
On November 26, 2011, a memorial plaque to the writer was installed in Ufa on the facade of the house No. 56 on Gogol Street, where he was born and spent his infancy years, which he mentioned more than once in his works.
On September 7, 2014, Sergei Dovlatov Street was opened in New York[27].
In Russia, a street in the city of Ukhta, Komi Republic, is named after Sergei Dovlatov[28].
On September 4, 2016, at the house 23 on Rubinstein Street in St. Petersburg, within the framework of the three day festival "D Day" dedicated to the 75th anniversary of Sergei Dovlatov, the opening ceremony of the monument to the writer by the sculptor Vyacheslav Bukhaev took place 29][30][31][32][33].
Mina Polyanskaya.
"Dovlatov and others".http://www.peremeny.ru/blog/19997
Cultural influence[edit / edit wiki text]
In 1994, Peter Stein staged the play "The New American" at the Chekhov Moscow Art Theater based on the life of Sergei Dovlatov and his works "Zone: Notes of a Supervisor" and "Reserve".
Sergey Dovlatov is played by Dmitry Brusnikin.
The performance has been successfully performed on the small stage of the Moscow Art Theater for more than 20 years.[34]
Mikhail Weller called one of the autobiographical stories "Seryozha Dovlatov's Knife".
S. Dovlatov's books - "Zone", "Suitcase", "Reserve", "Stories" - are included in the list of 100 books recommended by the Ministry of Education and Science of Russia for independent reading by schoolchildren.
Dovlatov has been one of the most widely read, frequently and widely published Russian writers for a quarter of a century.
Along with Joseph Brodsky and Alexander Solzhenitsyn, he is one of the three most famous Russian speaking authors in the West at the end of the XX century.[35]
Dovlatov's works have been translated into more than thirty languages of the world.
He is the only Russian speaking writer whose ten stories have been published in the elite magazine "New Yorker".[36]
Alcoholism[edit / edit wiki text]
S. D. Dovlatov suffered from alcoholism.
According to the literary critic A. Y. Aryev, who knew Dovlatov well in his youth:
It was more or less a mass phenomenon, because, in general, we all drank quite a lot, And although it was a common phenomenon in the bohemian and simply literary environment, but the way all these Stalin Prize winners and masters of socialist realism drank is so incomprehensible to the mind.
We were no match for them.
They just drank somewhere behind their blue fences to the point of stupefaction, and we had to move from store to store, get money somewhere and everything else.
- "Andrey Aryev about Dovlatov:" He just wanted to be published""
Alexander Genis, who knew Dovlatov well, wrote[37]:
Sergey hated his binge drinking and fought furiously against them.
He hadnot drunk for years, but vodka, like a shadow at noon, was patiently waiting in the wings.
Recognizing her power, Sergei wrote shortly before his death: "If I donot drink for years, then I remember about Her, cursed, from morning to night."
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
↑ 1 2 3 German National Library, Berlin State Library, Bavarian State Library, etc. Record #119538156 / / General regulatory Control — 2012-2016.
<a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q27302"></a><a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q304037"></a><a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q256507"></a><a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q170109"></a><a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q36578"></a>
↑ data.bnf.fr: open data platform — 2011.
<a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q20666306"></a><a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q54837"></a>
↑ http://data.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb125104238
↑ In New York, the issue of assigning one of the streets named after Dovlatov will be resolved ↑ Relatives and facts of biography ↑ Sergey Donatovich Dovlatov.
www.ozon.ru.
Checked on August 19, 2008.
Евгений Eugene Rein.
I'm bored without Brodsky and Dovlatov.
"The Case" (January 19, 2004).
Checked on August 19, 2008.
Archived from the original source on August 24, 2011.
↑ Joseph Brodsky.
About Seryozha Dovlatov.
official website of G. A. Yavlinsky (September 03, 2003).
Checked on August 19, 2008.
Archived from the original source on August 24, 2011.
↑ What role did stuffed pepper play in the fate of Dovlatov ↑ Sergey Dovlatov.
From the unknown Игорь Igor Efimov.
Expanding the boundaries of the possible.
Novy Bereg magazine, No. 10, 2005.
Checked on August 19, 2008.
Archived from the original source on August 24, 2011 .
Сергей Sergey Dovlatov.
Solo on underwood.
Татьяна Tatiana Scriabina.
Dovlatov, Sergey Donatovich.
encyclopedia "Circumnavigation".
Checked on August 19, 2008.
Archived from the original source on August 24, 2011.
Евгений Eugene Rein.
A few words after that.
- Zvezda magazine.
- St. Petersburg, 1994, No.
3. ↑ Dovlatov Sergey Donatovich.
www.sem40.ru.
Checked on August 19, 2008.
Archived from the original source on August 24, 2011.
Там Tamara Zibunova.
The vacuum cleaner is still working.
"Novaya Gazeta" (August 22, 2002).
Checked on August 19, 2008.
Archived from the original source on August 24, 2011 .
Сергей Sergey Dovlatov.
"The gift of organic non malice", an interview with Viktor Yerofeyev.
Checked on August 19, 2008.
Archived from the original source on August 24, 2011.
↑ Dovlatov and the surrounding area.
"Death and other concerns", Alexander Genis, Radio Liberty, April 18, 2007 TER TERRA NOVA 2005 04 03 Pekurovskaya ↑ Life (biography) :: Sergey Dovlatov ↑ Sergey Dovlatov Biography ↑ Here and further information from the Bibliographic reference in the third volume of the publication "Sergey Dovlatov.
Collection of prose in 3 volumes".
- St. Petersburg: "Limbus Press", 1995 ↑ Epistolary novel, Igor Efimov, Sergey Dovlatov, publishing house "Zakharov", 2001, 464 pages, hardcover, ISBN 5-8159-0069-9 ↑ Do not read other people's letters: S. Dovlatov — I. Efimov.
Judicial novel, I. Tatarintsev, Novaya Gazeta, No. 55, August 2, 2004 ↑ "Dovlatov's house will be decorated with a board" "Business Petersburg" ISSN 1606-1829 (Online) with reference to the press service of the Government of St. Petersburg, August 28, 2007 ↑ The Return of Dovlatov / / Youth of Estonia, 02.09.2006 ↑ Sergey Dovlatov Street was officially opened in New York ↑ The new Ukhtinskaya street was named ↑ Opening of the monument.
Dovlatov's Day (3.09.2016).
Verified on September 4, 2016.
↑ The opening ceremony of the monument to Sergei Dovlatov was held in St. Petersburg.
Radio Liberty (4.09.2016).
Verified on September 4, 2016.
↑ A monument to Sergei Dovlatov was opened in St. Petersburg.
Radio Liberty (4.09.2016).
Verified on September 4, 2016 .
Открытие Opening of the monument to Sergei D. Dovlatov.
Konstantin Dubrovin (4.09.2016).
Verified on September 4, 2016.
Памятник The monument to Sergei Dovlatov is open (photo).
<url> (4.09.2016).
Verified on September 4, 2016.
↑ Chekhov Moscow Art Theater: A New American ↑ Sergey Dovlatov's Ship Harbor, August 24, 2015, SMTU ↑ How the "New American" captured the minds of emigration, "Moskovsky Komsomolets", L. Fedorova Ford, September 1, 2016 ↑ " Dovlatov and the surrounding area.
"Death and other worries""
Literature[edit / edit wiki text]
Genis A. A. Dovlatov and the surroundings: a philological novel.
Moscow: Vagrius, 2001.
- 288 p.
- ISBN 5-264-00541-9 Kovalova A., Lurie L. Dovlatov.
St. Petersburg: Amphora, 2009 — - 441 p.
- ISBN 978-5-367-00943-9 (Series "Main characters") Pekurovskaya, Asya.
When it happened to sing S. D. and me: Sergey Dovlatov through the eyes of his first wife.
St. Petersburg: Symposium, 2001 — - 432 p.
- ISBN 5-89091-160-0 Salmon L. Mechanisms of humor.
About the work of Sergei Dovlatov.
M.: Progress Tradition, 2008 — - 255 p.
- ISBN 5-89826-294-6 Sukhoi I. N. Sergey Dovlatov.
Time.
place, fate.
Ed. 3 E. St. Petersburg.: Azbuka, 2010 — - 288 p.
- ISBN 978-5-389-01083-3 (1st ed. : 1996, 2nd ed.: 2006) Popov V. G. Dovlatov.
M.: Molodaya gvardiya, 2010.
- 368 p.
— ISBN 978-5-235-03358-0 (ZhZL); 2nd ed.: 2006.
Sergey Dovlatov: creativity, personality, fate: The results of the First International Conference " Dovlatov readings" / comp.
and prepared by A. Aryev.
- St. Petersburg: Zvezda, 1999.
- 320 p. Lanin, B. A. Sergey Dovlatov / / Prose of Russian emigration (the third wave): A manual for teachers of literature.
- New School, 1997.
- pp.
101-113 — - 208 p — - 20,000 copies.
— ISBN 5-7301-0275-5.
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
Website about Sergey Dovlatov Memorial page of Sergey Dovlatov, boboshka and marzana of Methodius Kobylkin, Shop of Languages.
Sergey Dovlatov in the Pushkin Mountains Dovlatov Days in Tallinn, August 25-27, 2011 Sergey Dovlatov's autographs on books presented to Viktor Nekrasov, correspondence Website "Solo on underwood" Decree of the Government of St. Petersburg No. 297 of 21.07.2007 on the installation of a memorial plaque to S. D. Dovlatov.
Memories of friends of Mina Polyanskaya.
Others and Dovlatov.
Blog of changes.
September 8, 2016 http://www.peremeny.ru/blog/19997 Barsova, Natalia.
The whole truth about Dovlatov: St. Petersburg researchers debunk common myths about the writer / / MK in St. Petersburg.
2006.
September 6, - testimonies of Vladimir and Natalia Evseviev.
Kubersky I.
The little iron dog from Seryozha Dovlatov [: essay ] // Network Literature.
2008.
Laidinen N. Grigory Ryskin: "My Jewish mother was a bath attendant" [: interview ] / / Alef.
2008.
December, - recalls, among other things, about the joint work in the "Russian American".
Zibunova, Tamara Nikolaevna.
Sergey Dovlatov in Tallinn: September 1972 March 1975, - memoirs of a close friend Blomberg, Svetlana.
"Memory beyond memorable dates" - about the Tallinn period of Dovlatov's life
Thematic sites
Internet Movie Database · Rodovod
Regulatory Control BNF: 125104238 · GND: 119538156 · ISNI: 0000 0001 2276 291X · LCCN: n79068738 · NDL: 00746185 · NKC: jn19990001838 · NTA: 070239320 · SUDOC: 034339256 · VIAF: 9954395
Radio programs dedicated to Dovlatov
In honor of Sergei Dovlatov, Anna Plotnikova, "Voice of America", 2004.
Dovlatov and the surrounding area.
The series of broadcasts by Alexander Genis on Radio Liberty, March April 2007.
Works of art
Humor is the decoration of the nation…
Sergey Donatovich Dovlatov, a genius with a wide chest and a big heart.
Sergey Dovlatov on Lib.
Ru
Reviews
Ivanova N.
It is recommended to read other people's letters: Sergey Dovlatov Igor Efimov.
Epistolary novel.
- M.: Zakharov, 2001 — - 463 p. // Banner.
2001.
№ 5.
Video
Sergey Dovlatov would have turned 70 today, "Russia 24", August 27, 2011.
Life is not easy…
Your Sergey Dovlatov, directors: Alexey Shishov, Elena Yakovich, 2007.
Dovlatov.
Part One, directed by Lev Lurie, 2007.
Dovlatov.
Part Two, directed by Lev Lurie, 2007.
Opening of the exhibition key of A. Florensky "Drawings for Dovlatov" in the Library named after M. Yu.
Lermontov.
Saint Petersburg TV Channel, September 1, 2011 Presentation of the Sergey Dovlatov Literary Prize.
Saint Petersburg, September 4, 2011 Trailer for the documentary animated film "Written by Sergey Dovlatov", 2012
Source — "https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dovlatov, _Sergey Donatovich&oldid=82302418"
Russian Russian writers of the XX century Writers of Russia Publicists of the USA Russian writers of the XX century Russian writers of the XX century Russian emigrants of the third wave in the USA Russian writers of the third wave in the USA Russian writers of the third wave of emigration Personalities: Born on September 3, Born in 1941 Born in Ufa Died on August 24, Died in 1990 Died in New York Personalities by alphabet Writers by alphabet Sergey Dovlatov Writers of Russia of the XX century Publicists of Russia Publicists of the USA Russian writers of the XX century Russian emigrants of the third wave in the USA Russian writers of the third wave of emigration Personalities:Saint Petersburg Personalities:Tallinn Vera Panova Died of heart failure and was buried at the Mount Hebron Cemetery
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