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Neva (magazine)

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Neva
EditorNatalia Grantseva (since 2007)
Former editorsOleksandr Chernenko (1955-1957), Sergey Voronin (1957-1964), Alexander Popov (1964-1978), Dmitry Khrenkov (1979-1984), Boris Nikolsky (1985-2006)
FrequencyOnce per month
Total circulation
(1955)
3.200
FounderJSC (Neva magazine)
FoundedApril 1955
First issueApril 1955 (1955-April)
CompanyCoffee Hall
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian
Websitenevajournal.ru
ISSN0130-741X

Neva is a Russian literary magazine, founded in the Soviet era.

History

The magazine was first published in St. Petersburg in April 1955. It was founded on the basis of yield up to being the "Leningrad almanac" as the official origin of the Leningrad writers' organizations.

In Soviet times, the magazine published works by Mikhail Zoshchenko, Mikhail Sholokhov, Veniamin Kaverin, Lydia Chukovskaya, Lev Gumilyov, Dmitry Likhachov, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Daniil Granin, Fyodor Abramov, Viktor Konetskiy, Arkady and Boris Strugatsky, Vladimir Dudintsev, Vasil Bykaŭ, and others.

In addition to prose, poetry, journalism,[1] and literary criticism, the magazine also printed translations from the literature of the

socialist countries, as well as (since 1981) under the heading "Seventh Notebook" - a group of short essays on the history of St. Petersburg and the surrounding areas.

Until 1989, the 1st page of the cover of the magazine issues published kinds of St. Petersburg. Since 1989, they have published on the 2nd page of the cover.

Circulation [2]

  • 1958 - 75,000 copies.
  • 1963-200 000 copies.
  • 1973-260 000 copies.
  • 1986-290 000 copies.
  • 1989-660 000-675 000 copies.
  • 1990-615 000-640 000 copies.
  • 1993 - 58 000 copies.
  • 1994 - 26,640 copies.

Authors

In the 2000s, their journalists include Eugene Alekhin, Gorbovsky Gleb, Alexander Karasyov, Alexander Kushner, Vladimir Lorchenkov, Sergei Pereslegin, Yuri Polyakov, Yevgeni Anatolyevich Popov, Galina Talanov, Igor Nikolayevich, Vladislav Kurash and others.[3]

References

  1. ^ http://magazines.russ.ru/neva/2012/6/b12.html
  2. ^ magazine "Friendship of Peoples", 1989, № 2, p. 267
  3. ^ http://magazines.russ.ru/neva/