Anna Akhmatova

Anna Akhmatova

Anna Akhmatova has written at least 21 books. Their most popular book is Poems with 26 saves with an average rating of 4⭐.

They are best known for writing in the genres one, asdfsa, and Asdfsa.

mone, asdfsa, and Asdfsa are their most common moods.

Author Bio

Anna Andreyevna Gorenko was born at Bolshoy Fontan, near the Black Sea port of Odessa, and moved with her family to Tsarskoye Selo, near St. Petersburg when she was eleven months old. Her parents were both descended from Russian nobility. From age 7 to 13 she and her family spent their summers in a dacha near Sevastopol. She started writing poetry at the age of 11, and was first published at age 17. Her father did not want poetry published under his name, so she adopted her grandmother's surname "Akhmatova" and published under the name Anna Akhmatova.

In 1905 her parents separated, and in 1906 she moved to Kiev. In 1910, she married another poet, Nikolay Gumilev and began attending Kiev University to study law. After one year, she then moved to St Petersburg to study literature. She became known in literary circles in St Petersburg's and gave regular public readings of her work. In 1910, she co-founded the influential Guild of Poets, which went on to develop the Acmeist anti-symbolist school of poetry.

In 1912, she published her first book, *Evening*, with the Guild of Poets. She also gave birth to a son, Lev.

In 1918, at the height of her fame, she ended her difficult marriage to Nikolay Gumilev and went on to marry another poet, Vladimir Shilejko. She shortly began having affairs again. In 1921 her first husband was executed for his alleged role in a monarchist anti-Bolshevik conspiracy. His execution, along with those of 61 others of Russia's intelligentsia, led to the break-up of the Acmeist poetry group.

Akhmatova and her son Lev were criticized by the Marxist state as representing a "bourgeois aesthetic", and in 1925 her work was unofficially banned. She continued to write (but not to publish) poetry while working as a translator and critic. Because of his parentage, her son Lev was denied admission to academic institutions and was imprisoned several times on accusations of counter-revolutionary activity. She queued for hours to deliver him food packages and plead on his behalf.

Akhmatova married Nikolai Punin, and stayed with him until 1935. He was also repeatedly imprisoned and in 1953 he died in the Gulag. Stalin approved the publication of one volume of her poetry, but it was withdrawn and pulped after only a few months. During this time, the government kept her under surveillance, going so far as to place recording devices in her flat, and produced 900 pages of reports on her. Despite this suppression, her work continued was secretly circulated in the gulags.

During World War II, Akhmatova read to soldiers in military hospitals and on the front line. She witnessed the 900 day Siege of Leningrad, and in 1940, she began to write "Poem without a Hero", which she considered to be her major work. In 1946 she received a visit from the liberal, western, Jewish philosopher Isaiah Berlin in 1946, and was accusing by the government of poisoning the minds of Soviet youth. Surveillance of her was increased and she was expelled from the Union of Soviet Writers.

In 1949 Akhmatova's son Lev was sentenced to 10 years in a Siberian prison camp. She spent several years trying to get him released, and she began to publish overtly propagandist poetry praising Stalin and his regime, although she did not consider this work, which may have saved both her life and her son's, as part of her official corpus. In 1951 she was readmitted to Union of Writers. In 1956 her son Lev was released from the prison camp, and her poetry began to be published again. Several books of her collected poetry were published in the following years.

In 1962 she was visited by Robert Frost and in her dacha in Komarovo she met with young Russian poets. In the 1960s she had become more popular in the than she had been before the revolution. Even the government came to recognize her as one of the major poets of the Silver Age, and she was permitted to travel. She visited Sicily and England, meeting with some pre-revolutionary friends and receiving the Taromina Prize. She died shortly after returning to Russia. Thousands attended the two memorial ceremonies which were held in Moscow and in Leningrad. After being displayed in an open coffin, she was interred at Komarovo Cemetery in St Petersburg.

Akhmatova's poem *Requiem*, which documented her experiences during the 1930s when she lived in poverty and her son and husband were repeatedly arrested, was finally published within USSR in 1987.

Wikipedia page

Poems

Poems
ByAnna Akhmatova

1988 • 26 Readers • 268 pages 4

Selected Poems

Selected Poems
ByAnna Akhmatova,D.M. Thomas(Translator)

1969 • 8 Readers • 160 pages 5

You Will Hear Thunder

You Will Hear Thunder
ByAnna Akhmatova

1969 • 3 Readers • 153 pages 3

Реквием: Поэма.

Реквием: Поэма.
ByAnna Akhmatova,Анна Ахматова

1963 • 2 Readers • 36 pages 5

Cover 3

Antologia Poética
ByAnna Akhmatova

1 Reader

Вечер

Вечер
ByAnna Akhmatova,Анна Ахматова

1912 • 1 Reader 5

Il prodigio delle cose

Il prodigio delle cose
ByAnna Akhmatova,Bruno Carnevali(Translator),+1 more

2012 • 1 Reader • 231 pages

The Stray Dog Cabaret

The Stray Dog Cabaret
ByPaul Schmidt(Translator)

2006 • 1 Reader • 168 pages

Cover 6

1989 • 1 Reader • 557 pages 4

Бег времени. Стихотворения и поэмы

Бег времени. Стихотворения и поэмы
ByAnna Akhmatova,Анна Ахматова

1965 • 1 Reader • 800 pages 4

Cover 6

2002 • 1 Reader

Where Books Fall Open: A Reader's Anthology of Wit & Passion

Where Books Fall Open: A Reader's Anthology of Wit & Passion
ByBascove(Editor),Italo Calvino(Contributor)

2001 • 1 Reader • 149 pages

Requiem: Poème sans héros et autres poèmes

Requiem: Poème sans héros et autres poèmes
ByAnna Akhmatova,Jean-Louis Backès(Translator)

1982 • 1 Reader 3

Requiem

Requiem
ByAnna Akhmatova,Anna Andreevna Ahmatova

1963 • 1 Reader • 47 pages

He leído que no mueren las almas

He leído que no mueren las almas
ByAnna Akhmatova,Anna Ajmátova

2018 • 1 Reader • 68 pages

The Word That Causes Death's Defeat

The Word That Causes Death's Defeat
ByAnna Akhmatova,Nancy K. Anderson(Translator)

2004 • 1 Reader • 364 pages 5

White Flock

White Flock
ByAnna Akhmatova,Andrey Kneller(Translator)

2013 • 1 Reader • 216 pages 4

Реквием

Реквием
ByAnna Akhmatova,Анна Ахматова

1963 • 1 Reader • 686 pages 4

Cover 2

Чётки
ByAnna Akhmatova,Анна Ахматова

1 Reader

The Giant Book of Poetry

The Giant Book of Poetry
ByWilliam Walsh,Margaret Atwood

2006