Marking May as the “Short Story Month,” Words Without Borders highlights some of its stellar past publications, the Dagestani-Russian novelist Alisa Ganieva’s bitterly comic “A Village Feast” among them.
![Dmitry Golynko Dmitry Golynko](https://iwp.uiowa.edu/sites/iwp/files/styles/bio_thumbnail/public/attached_images/PHOTO%20Golynko%20150%20by%20180_0.jpg?itok=XUa_QdSq)
- Europe
- Eastern Europe
- Russia
Dmitry GOLYNKO (poet; Russia) has five books of poems: Homo Scribens (1994), Директория [The Directory] (2001), Бетонные голубки [Concrete Doves] (2003), As it Turned Out (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2008) and most recently Что это было и другие обоснования [What It Was and the Other Arguments] (2013). His poetry has been widely translated, and appears in numerous magazines, journals, and anthologies, including Graywolf Press’ New European Poets (2008). A researcher at the Russian Institute of Art History, faculty at St- Petersburg University of Cinema and TV, and a contributing editor at Moscow Art Magazine, he publishes extensively on contemporary art and cinema. His participation was made possible by The Paul and Hualing Engle Fund.[
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