Andrei Yefimovich Zarin (; 28 May 1862 â 1929) was a Russian writer of popular novels and short stories, including crime fiction, in the late 19th and early 20th century. He was born in St Petersburg in the Russian Empire, graduating from the gymnasium and entering into Vilnius University in modern-day Lithuania in 1879. His first publications were economic articles in the Vilnius Gazette. He started publishing fiction in 1881. He was the editor of the journal Stars and Pictorial Review.
Most of Zarin's crime fiction focuses on the ingenuity of the detective in solving the crime, although his novella "In Search of a Murderer", first published in serial form in 1915, is notable for its unusually explicit for the time depiction of violence against women.
Like other popular Fin de siècle Russian novelists, Zarin deployed Spiritualist and Occult themes in his work, including in Spirit (1902) and Dar Satany (1906).
In 1906 he was imprisoned for one and a half years. He died in 1929.
Works
Novels
- ëÃÂø÷ýàø ÃÂþýû (Life and Dreaming) (1891),
- ëÃÂþÃÂàÿþöðÃÂýþóþû (Daughter of Fire) (1892),
- ëáõÃÂÃÂõ óõÃÂþøû (The Grey Hero) (1893),
- ëáøûÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂû (Silhouettes) (1897);
- ëÃÂÃÂø÷òðýøõû (The Calling) (1897)
Short story collections
- ëÃÂþòþÃÂÃÂÃÂðàóþûþòðû (Talking Head) (1896),
- ëÃÂþòõÃÂÃÂø ø ÃÂðÃÂÃÂúð÷ÃÂû (Tales and Stories) (1896),
- ëÃÂþöýÃÂù ÃÂûõôû (False Trail) (1896),
- ëÃÂþ ÿÃÂø÷òðýøÃÂû (By Vocation) (1897),
- ëÃÂþô úþÃÂõýÃÂû (Under the Root) (1895),
- ëâþÃÂðûø÷ðÃÂþÃÂû (Totalisator) (1891),
- ëáþÃÂýÃÂõ ÃÂÃÂðòÃÂû (Weeds) (1890),
- ëÃÂõÃÂýþõ ÃÂõÃÂôÃÂõû (Faithful Heart) (1897).
References
External links