Yuri Nikitin (author)
Yuri Aleksandrovich Nikitin, born November 30, 1939 in Kharkov, USSR, is a Russian science fiction and fantasy writer.
Although he was active in science fiction before perestroika, the recognition came when he wrote a Slavic fantasy novel, The Three from the Forest. One of the protagonists is a character based on the Russian Rurikid Prince Oleg of Novgorod, who is a mainstay of many sequels. Nikitin also wrote a couple of novels about Vladimir I of Kiev. Nikitin created a called Inn as a community portal to help young writers.
Nikitin's books have a distinct, free, and often intentionally primitive and repetitive style with many jokes, reflecting his intent to keep the reader on topic and carry his ideas through. His later books develop the ideas of becoming a Transhuman through self-development and survival of the spiritually fittest.
Biography
Yuri Nikitin was born November 30, 1939, in Kharkiv, Ukraine, an only child in a poor family. His father was drafted into the Soviet army soon after and died in World War II, and his mother never married again. A weaver in a local factory, she raised her son on her own, with the only help of her elderly parents. The four of them lived in a small rustic house in Zhuravlevka, a half-rural suburb of Kharkiv. Nikitin’s grandfather was known as the best carpenter, joiner, and shoemaker in the local area. However, the family could barely make both ends meet: as Nikitin recalled later, in the post-war time they had to eat soup of the potato peelings disposed by their neighbors.Living in poverty and starvation affected the young Nikitin’s health badly. Born with a heart disease, he also got rickets, rheumatism, and chronic tonsillitis. At the age of 15, Nikitin was told by doctors that he would not live for more than six months, but in the next year he overcame illnesses and improved his health greatly by means of yoga, hard physical exercise, and strict diet.
From his earliest years, Nikitin was bilingual in Ukrainian and Russian, which is rather common for people in Eastern Ukraine. Later, he also learned English and Polish on his own, in order to be able to read the books by foreign SF writers that were not translated in the USSR.
At the age of 16, Nikitin was expelled from school for scuffling and hooliganism and got his first job as a metalworker in a local plant. Two years later, he became a lumberman and rafter in the construction sites of Russian Far North, then a geologist exploring the Ussuri region with its swampy coniferous forests, great rivers, and many places where, literally, the foot of man had never stepped before. Bright impressions of those journeys inspired his Saveliy Cycle, a series of short SF stories featuring a hunter from taiga who meets aliens and teaches the art of hunting to them.
In 1964, Nikitin returned to Kharkiv and continued his series of temporary jobs, often low-skilled and involving hard physical work. He lingered in each one for hardly more than a year, mainly because of his wish to try something different. As he commented later in I am 65, his autobiography, “I've never had a job I hated to do. Furthermore, I knew that whatever I did was temporary, that my true destiny was great and my current job nothing but an adventure I’d like to recall someday.”
During 1964-65, Nikitin completed his secondary education as an external student in an evening school and considered seriously his choice of full-time career. He picked sports, music, painting, and writing as the most promising options for the kind of person he was: an ambitious man of 25 with no higher education. By 1967, he achieved the master-of-sports rank in canoeing, first grades in boxing, sambo, track and field athletics, learned to play the violin, sold several cartoons to local magazines.
Nikitin wrote his very first stories in 1965, just for fun. Those were humorous and very short: the shortest one only counted 28 words. All of them were purchased by Russian and Ukrainian magazines. In the next several years, Nikitin created lots of short SF stories with the same distinctive features: new unusual subject, lively characters, fast-changing events, and striking end. In 1973, they were collected to make Nikitin’s first book, The Man Who Changed the World, which was a noticeable success. Many stories were translated into foreign languages and published in the countries of Warsaw Pact. However, the author’s earnings were not enough for living and supporting the family, so he retained his main occupation as a foundry worker till 1976.
Nikitin’s second book, Fire Worshippers, belongs to the genre of industrial novel, which was extremely popular in the Soviet Union. Nikitin wrote it on a bet with his fellow writers who said that writing industrial novels was far more difficult than SF and that he was hardly capable of it. Nikitin bet that he would write such a novel in six months and won. The book received several awards, and a TV series was made on the basis of it. The novel featured real people – Nikitin’s co-workers in the foundry. He even used their real names, and they were pleased by this fact.
In 1976, Nikitin joined both the Communist Party and the USSR Union of Writers. He was the first ever science fiction writer who was not only allowed but invited insistently to do it. The management of both those organizations had rather slighting attitudes towards science fiction in general, but they highly appreciated Fire Worshippers and the fact that Nikitin was a workman without higher education: it was congruent with the aims of Communist propaganda.
Nikitin used his newly gained opportunities and influence to found the Speculative Fiction Fan Club in Kharkiv. It was designed as a communication platform for SF writers, scientists and avid readers, a place for literature discussions and critics, and a means to help young SF authors improve their writing skills and get their stories published. In 2003, Nikitin also created .
In 1979, Nikitin wrote his third book, The Golden Rapier: a historical novel about Alexander Zasyadko, a Russian general of Ukrainian origin and inventor of rocket weapons. The contents of the book were found to be inappropriate by Leonid Kravchuk, the head of agitprop department of the Communist Party of Ukraine. He accused Nikitin of Ukrainian nationalism and ordered to destroy all the printed copies of the book.
For his scandalous novel, Nikitin was dismissed from his office in the Union of Writers, banned from publishing in Ukraine, and his name was forbidden to mention in the local media. Also in 1979, he entered the prestigious Higher Literary Courses in the Literary Institute, Moscow. The pro-rector of HLC had read The Golden Rapier and so liked it that he accepted Nikitin despite the Communist officials strongly recommending not to do it.
In 1981, Nikitin completed HLC and returned to Kharkiv but could not resume his work as a writer. Whatever he wrote was rejected by publishers for the reason that his name was blacklisted. In 1985, this made him move to Moscow. There Nikitin published his fourth book, The Radiant Far Palace, a collection of short science fiction and fantasy stories.
During perestroika, when some degree of free enterprise was allowed to Soviet citizens, Nikitin in association with other writers founded “Homeland”, one of the first cooperative publishing companies in the country. He worked as a senior editor there for a while, then established his own private publishing company, “Three-Headed Serpent”, later re-organized into “Ravlik”. It specialized in English and American SF, almost unknown to the Soviet readers before. Books for translation and publishing were selected by Nikitin from his home library that included over 5,000 SF books in English. As he explained later, “I could prepare a hundred volumes of selected sci-fi works as there was no book in my library that I hadn’t read from cover to cover.”
By that time, Nikitin had half a dozen of his own novels written but unpublished. In the USSR, no author was allowed to release more than one book in three years. Another reason that publishers rejected Nikitin's manuscripts was that his protagonists were immortal and happy with it. The Soviet editorial policy was to publish only the works that showed immortality as a terrible and abominable thing; all immortal heroes were expected to repent and commit suicide. In 1992, Nikitin printed the first of those novels, The Three from the Forest, in “Ravlik” – and it was a great success. Each next book of this series became a bestseller.
In the late 1990s, Nikitin abandoned his publishing business and focused entirely on writing books. The rights for them were purchased by major publishing houses: at first "Centrpolygraph", then "Eksmo".
On March 30, 2014, during the Eksmo Book Festival in Moscow, Nikitin officially confessed his writing Richard Longarms, an epic fantasy novel series ongoing since 2001 with over 7,000,000 copies sold in Russia and other countries, under the pen name of Gaius Julius Orlovsky.
Today Nikitin is the author of more than 100 books and one of the most commercially successful Russian writers.
Themes
“The World of SFF”, the largest and most reputable Russian SFF magazine, writes about Nikitin: “It is hard to find another writer whose novels encompass so different themes and target audiences – and inspire such contradictory public response.” Nikitin is a recognized founder of Slavic fantasy, to which The Three from the Forest and The Three Kingdoms belong, but he also worked in the genres of hard SF, political fiction, social SF about the close-at-hand future, comic fantasy, and historical fantasy.The Three from the Forest cycle features three protagonists: Targitai, whose prototype is a legendary Scythian king of the same name, Oleg, identified with the historical personality of Slavic Prince Oleg, and Mrak, a strongman and werewolf. They go through the series of adventures in varied settings: the half-mythological lands of Hyperborea and Scythia, then Kievan Rus’, medieval Europe and Middle East. The last novels are set in Russia of the late 1990s, the outer space, and alien planets. Four books, from The Holy Grail to The Return of Sir Thomas, form a separate sub-cycle telling the story of a heroic quest by Oleg and Sir Thomas, a knight crusader. As of June 2014, the series has 19 books and 6 more are planned.
The Strange Novels fall into the genres of social, psychological, and philosophical SF. The books speculate about the nearest future of Russia and the world. Most attention is given to the problems of personal and social development in the fast-changing hi-tech environment, to the changes that might occur in our present-day morals and culture under the impact of the new technologies. The author is generally optimistic about the future. In his books, those who are strong-willed, hard-working, honest and responsible are likely to become winners.
A peculiarity of The Strange Novels cycle is the absence of mainstay heroes. Except for The Imago and The Immortist, both featuring Bravlin Pechatnik, each novel tells a separate story. The books are only united by the common world and the scope of problems.
The four books of The Russians Coming Cycle are commonly defined as alternate history, but in fact they were political thrillers about the nearest future. The first novel, Rage, was written in 1994 while set in 1996. The protagonist is Platon Krechet, the President of Russia, determined to make his country strong and prosperous. In order to do it, he adopts Islam as the new state religion instead of Russian Orthodoxy. Such a theme was considered unacceptable at that time. No Russian publisher dared to release this novel, despite the unprecedented commercial success of The Three from the Forest several years before, so the first edition of Rage and its two sequels was printed and distributed by Nikitin at his own cost.
Neologisms
Several words invented by Nikitin are now used in Russian language, especially on the web.- Baim – a computer game, especially a MMOG. First used in The Baimer, this term subsequently appears in many other “strange novels” and also in The Reply , a collection of short stories by Sergey Sadov. Nikitin explained his reasons to invent this word as the necessity to give the robustly developing industry of computer games its own name, like the term “cinematography” was introduced to replace the old-fashioned “motion picture photography.”
- Einastia – a philosophical doctrine developed by Oleg, the protagonist in The Three from the Forest cycle. Einastia is mentioned in several books of the series but its essence is never described and hence remains an issue of debate among Nikitin’s fans. The author prefers not to answer direct questions about the meaning of this word.
- Usians – a pejorative term used by some characters in the Strange Novels cycle to denote a sort of people, particularly in the present-day USA, who have a range of distinctive negative features, including:
- Adherence to “universal values”, often understood primitively;
- Devil-may-care attitudes towards other people;
- Following a set of principles like “self comes first,” “don’t be a hero” etc.
Personal life
On May 22, 2010 Nikitin married Lilia during a small ceremony at their home in Red Eagles, a cottage settlement near Moscow. Only their closest friends were invited.
Nikitin is fascinated with new technologies: he monitors the hi-tech news thrice a day, has six computers at home and many electronic devices, which he upgrades and changes for newer models regularly. He also loves to play MMORTS and spends 2–3 hours a day on average in MMOGs.
For over 30 years, Nikitin gave not a single interview, visited no conference or SF convention, and held no meeting with readers. This situation only changed after the release of Transhuman.
As of June 2014, Yuri Nikitin is a frequent visitor to the online forum where he has the nickname of Frog, being one of the first registered members and an honorary administrator. This website is the main platform of Nikitin’s online communication with fans and readers as he has a skeptical attitude towards blogging. Also, there are online clubs of Nikitin’s fans in Facebook and VK.
Today Nikitin and his wife live in Falcon Hill, a cottage settlement near Moscow. They have a pet boxer Linda. As noted by fans, Nikitin has lent his passion for strong sweet black coffee to nearly all his heroes. Nikitin prefers a healthy way of life: for many years, he drinks no alcohol and practices cycling and weightlifting as a hobby.
The Three from the Forest Cycle
- In the Very Beginning
- The Three from the Forest
- The Three in the Sands
- The Three and the Gods
- The Three in the Valley
- Mrak
- A Respite in Barbus
- The Secret Seven
- The Outcast
- The Destroyer of Magic
- Faramund
- The Hyperborean
- The Holy Grail/The Grail of Sir Thomas
- The Stonehenge/The Secret of Stonehenge
- The Revelation
- The Return of Sir Thomas
- Tower 2
- The Man of Axe
- Beyondhuman
The Richard Longarms Cycle (as Gaius Julius Orlovsky)
- Richard Longarms 1: Stranger
- Richard Longarms 2: Warrior of God
- Richard Longarms 3: Paladin of God
- Richard Longarms 4: Seignior
- Richard Longarms 5: Richard de Amalphie
- Richard Longarms 6: Lord of Three Castles
- Richard Longarms 7: Viscount
- Richard Longarms 8: Baron
- Richard Longarms 9: Jarl
- Richard Longarms 10: Earl
- Richard Longarms 11: Burggraf
- Richard Longarms 12: Landlord
- Richard Longarms 13: Pfaltzgraf
- Richard Longarms 14: Overlord
- Richard Longarms 15: Constable
- Richard Longarms 16: Marquis
- Richard Longarms 17: Grossgraf
- Richard Longarms 18: Lord Protector
- Richard Longarms 19: Majordom
- Richard Longarms 20: Markgraf
- Richard Longarms 21: Gaugraf
- Richard Longarms 22: Freigraf
- Richard Longarms 23: Wieldgraf
- Richard Longarms 24: Raugraf
- Richard Longarms 25: Konung
- Richard Longarms 26: Duke
- Richard Longarms 27: Archduke
- Richard Longarms 28: Furst
- Richard Longarms 29: Kurfurst
- Richard Longarms 30: Grossfurst
- Richard Longarms 31: Landesfurst
- Richard Longarms 32: Grand
- Richard Longarms 33: Grand Duke
- Richard Longarms 34: Archfurst
- Richard Longarms 35: Reichsfurst
- Richard Longarms 36: Prince
- Richard Longarms 37: Prince Consort
- Richard Longarms 38: Vice-Prince
- Richard Longarms 39: Archprince
- Richard Longarms 40: Kurprince
- Richard Longarms 41: Erbprince
- Richard Longarms 42: Crown Prince
- Richard Longarms 43: Grand Prince
- Richard Longarms 44: Prince Regent
- Richard Longarms 45: King
- Richard Longarms 46: King Consort
- Richard Longarms 47: Monarch
- Richard Longarms 48: Stadtholder
- Richard Longarms 49: Prince of the Emperor's Mantle
- Richard Longarms 50: Emperor
- Richard Longarms 51: Lord of the Crimson Star of Evil
- Richard Longarms 52: Richard and the Great Mages
- Richard Longarms 53: Richard Longarms Trapped
The Prince's Feast Cycle
- The Prince's Feast
- The Final Fight
The Hyperborea Cycle
- Prince Rus
- Ingvar and Olha
- Prince Vladimir
The Teeth Open Wide Cycle
- Teeth Wide Open
- Ears Up In Tubes
- The Three-Handed Sword
The Three Kingdoms Cycle
- Artania
- Pridon
- Kuyavia
- Jutland, Brother of Pridon
- Jutland and Melizenda
The Megaworld Cycle
- Megaworld
- The Lords of Megaworld
The Ballads of Great Knights
- Lohengrin, the Swan Knight
- Tannhauser
The Strange Novels
- I Live in This Body
- Scythians
- The Baimer
- The Imago
- The Immortist
- The Sorcerer of Agudy Starship
- The Great Mage
- Our Land is Great and Plentiful
- The Last Stronghold
- Passing Through Walls
- Transhuman
- Worldmakers
- I Am a Singular
- Singomakers
- 2024
- Guy Gisborn, a Knight Valiant
- Dawnpeople
- The Nasts
- Alouette, little Alouette...
The Controller Cycle
- On the Threshold
- A Skeleton in the Closet
- The Birth of the Controller
- A Man from the Future
- Brigantines Raising Their Sails
The Russians Are Coming Cycle
- Rage
- The Empire of Evil
- On the Dark Side
- The Horn of Jericho
The Timelord Cycle (as Gaius Julius Orlovsky)
- Eugene the Timelord 1: The World of Three Moons
- Eugene the Timelord 2: The Tall Glerd
- Eugene the Timelord 3: The Cartridges of the Wizard
- Eugene the Timelord 4: All Women Are Chimeras
- Eugene the Timelord 5: Love Spells
- Eugene the Timelord 6: The Skyscrapers of the Mages
- Eugene the Timelord 7: Her Royal Highness
- Eugene the Timelord 8: The Kingdom of Gargalot
- Eugene the Timelord 9: The Victorious Torch of Gargalot
The Golden Talisman Cycle (as Gaius Julius Orlovsky; co-authored with a group of other writers)
- Worg: Run It Before Midnight
- The Lost Girl
- Racing with Death
- Willein the Smalling
- The Stronghold
- The Stronghold on Fire
- The Sister of Wind
- The Servant of the Reaper
- Striking Back
- Steel Feathers
Other books
- Fire Worshippers
- The Golden Rapier
- How to Become a Writer
- I am 65
- I am 75
Collections
- The Man Who Changed the World
- The Radiant Far Palace
- Singularity
- Singularity 2
Foreign releases
In 2013, a group of Nikitin’s fans, with the author’s consent, translated into English The Holy Grail and offered it as a free e-book on a range of online SFF forums.
As of June 2014, the English versions of three novels by Yury Nikitin are available as e-books in major online retailers.