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Zinovy Zinik : ウィキペディア英語版 | Zinovy Zinik Zinovy Zinik ((ロシア語:Зиновий Зиник); born June 16, 1945) is a novelist and broadcaster. Zinik was born in Moscow into a family of totally assimilated Russian Jews.〔Zinovy Zinic,'Freelance,' in Times Literary Supplement, Nov., 18, 2011 p.16: 'In mny childhood, I had never heard a word of Yiddish, never held a bible in my hands, and didn't know what the word synagogue meant.'〕 He studied painting at an art school and later studied topology at Moscow University. He started writing prose in the 1960s and contributed to the journal ''Teatr''.〔Robert Porter in Neil Cornwell and Nicole Christian (ed.), ''Reference Guide to Russian Literature'' (Taylor & Francis, 1998: ISBN 1-884964-10-9), p. 919.〕 He emigrated to Israel in 1975. In 1976 he accepted a job offer from the BBC and moved to the UK to work for the BBC World Service. His first published work was "Izveshchenie" (The notification, 1976); he is the author of eight books of fiction, including the novels ''Peremeshchennoe litso'' (Displaced person, 1981), ''Nisha v Panteone'' (A niche in the Pantheon, 1985), and ''Russofobka i fungofil'' (The russophobe and the fungophile, 1986, tr. by Michael Glenny as ''The Mushroom-Picker'', 1987), as well as the collection of short stories ''Mind the Doors'' (New York 2002). ''My Father's Leg'', a documentary novella which evolved from an essay on Königsberg/Kaliningrad published in the ''Times Literary Supplement'', was published in the Russian magazine ''Ural'' in 2005. He can be heard on (The Forum ) on the BBC World Service. ==References==
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