Oleg Postnov is a Russian author. Postnov is a novelist most recognized for his fiction about love. The critics have described Postnov's work as an amalgamation of the Russian's classics: "as if Vladimir Nabokov took on a rewrite of Gogol's Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka"—with the added "macabre of Edgar Allan Poe." Postnov's novel Angst has been translated into German.
Early years and education
Postnov was born in Russian Akademgorodok. He graduated from the Novosibirsk University, the Humanities Division. In 1990, Oleg Postnov received his PhD.
Family
Postnov lives in Akademgorodok, Novosibirsk, Russia with his son Nikita.
Writing career
The Sand Timer Postnov published his first work of fiction—a short story "The Sand Timer"—in 1997. The Sand Timer received the distinction of Matador Magazine's prestigious "top ten books 1998." Angst is an "erotic mysticism novel with a detective plot". In Russia, Postnov's Angst took the first prize in the "Catch of 1999" and was nominated for the Russian Booker Prize of 2002; for the National Bestseller Prize, shortlisted for the Apollon Grigoriev Prize In Germany, Die Berliner Literaturktitik compared the book to Nabokov's Lolita and called Postnov a "magician." The Antiquary
To Kiss the Harlequin. Chapters of Harlequin appeared in 2001 in Dmitry Kuzmin's "New Literary Card of Russia".
Postnov's doctorate explores classic Russian literature of the first third of the 19th century. Between 1986 and 2007, Postnov worked as senior scientist for the Institute of Philology Academy of Sciences. He is a recipient of the medal of the Russian Academy of Sciences and a Silver Sigma. Postnov has published a number of scholarly books and articles.
Scholarly books
Esthetics of Goncharov
Pushkin and Death
Death in Russia X-XX century
Scholarly articles
Pushkin and Grin
Bryus and the Russian Literary Tradition of the XX Century
The Individual and the Tradition in the Modern World
Sysoev's Paradox
Television and theater
In 2011, The Moscow Theater of Nations opened its production of Albert Camus's Caligula in translation of Oleg Postnov and E.A. Gorny. In 2012, the production received the most prestigious award in the Russian Federation theater—the Golden Mask. TV channelMoskva 24 reported that "The ever-busy Muscovites not only find the time to watch this four-hour-long play," but even form long lines to buy the expensive tickets. Postnov’s contribution to the theater, —in addition to his translation of Camu’s Caligula, include an original play called Ernst, Theodor, Amadeus. Postnov’s fairy-tale-like play explores the last year and death of the German Romantic and storyteller best known as E.T.A. Hoffmann.