Ilya Alexandrovich Salov (ÃÂûÃÂàÃÂûõúÃÂðýôÃÂþòøàáðûþò, 6 April 1834, Penza, Russian Empire, â 24 December 1902, Saratov, Russian Empire, was a Russian writer, playwright and translator.
Having started in mid-1850s (in Russky Vestnik, Sovremennik and Otechestvennye Zapiski) with a series of short stories and novelets mostly in the vein of the then hugely popular Ivan Turgenev's prose, Salov came to prominence in the late 1870s with a series of Otechestvennye Zapiski-published novellas (Merchant Chesalkin's Mill, Asp). In 1892 the Works by I.A.Salov in three volumes came out, followed by two short story collections, S natury (From Nature, á ýðÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂ, 1893), and Suyeta mirskaya (Worldly Vanity, áÃÂõÃÂð üøÃÂÃÂúðÃÂ, 1894). Among his acclaimed later works were the novels Uyutny ugolok (Cosy Corner, ãÃÂÃÂýÃÂù ÃÂóþûþú, 1894) and Praktika zhizni (Life's Experience, ÃÂÃÂðúÃÂøúð öø÷ýø, 1895), among them.