Agop Melkonyan
Agop Melkonyan (Burgas, March 10, 1949 – Sofia, July 23, 2006) was a Bulgarian writer of Armenian descent. He is best known as an author of science fiction short stories and novels. He was also a translator, journalist, editor and scholar.
Melkonyan popularized in Bulgaria recent discoveries in Physics, Astronomy and Mechanics. His literary influence spread mainly through Bulgarian periodical editions as: Orbita, Omega and Varkolak.[1]
Melkonyan was awarded the most important Bulgarian prize for science fiction Gravition in 1991. There is a literary prize on his name and a widely popular memorial anthology was published in 2017 under the title A Machine for Stories.[2] Melkonyan's story A Boy with Wings (‘Momche s krila’) is included in the primary schools’ program.
His translations, mostly from Russian and Armenian, include both poetry and prose (works by his friends Arkady and Boris Strugatsky among others).
His works, translated into many European languages, include: the prose collections A Memory of the World ('Spomen za sveta', 1980), Via Dolorosa, 1987, Death in the Sea-Shell ('Smart v rakovinata', 1994), A Turmoil for Souls ('Sumatoha za dushite', 2004) and others.
References
- ^ Ashley, Mike. Science Fiction Rebels: The Story of the Science-Fiction Magazines from 1981 to 1990. The History of the Science-Fiction Magazine, Volume IV, Liverpool University Press, 2006, p. 305.
- ^ A Review for A Machine for Stories
Bibliography
Агоп Мелконян (1949-2006), В: "Тера фантастика" / 2011, p. 8-23.
Милоев, Велко (състав.) и др., Спомен за света на Агоп Мелконян, София, ИК Ерато-арт, 2008.
External links
- Bulgarian male writers
- Bulgarian male short story writers
- Bulgarian science fiction writers
- Bulgarian novelists
- Bulgarian translators
- Bulgarian journalists
- 1949 births
- 2006 deaths
- Writers from Burgas
- Bulgarian people of Armenian descent
- Translators from Russian
- Translators from Armenian
- 20th-century Bulgarian novelists
- 20th-century Bulgarian short story writers
- 20th-century translators
- 20th-century journalists