A collection of stories of people and places in central asian republics of USSR.
Photos: TASS, Elton C. Fax
Drawings: Elton C. Fax
A collection of stories of people and places in central asian republics of USSR.
Photos: TASS, Elton C. Fax
Drawings: Elton C. Fax
Myths, legends, and true stories about love have always been a major part of oral folk art and have inspired countless works of literature. Love, however, has many faces and can evoke both positive and negative emotions—hence the title of our anthology, which features a selection of outstanding Russian love stories from the late nineteenth century to the present day.
This collection includes works by classical Russian writers such as Ivan Turgenev, Anton Chekhov, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, and Alexander Kuprin, among others, as well as pieces by Soviet authors like Nikolai Gribachev, Yuri Kazakov, Fazil Iskander, and Vasily Shukshin, a writer, film director, and actor whose premature death was a significant loss to Soviet multinational literature.
The anthology is aimed at teenagers.
You can get the book here and here.
Designed by Robert Saifulin
Ivan Turgenev. Asya 5
Translated by Ivy and Tatiana Litvinov
Fyodor Dostoyevsky. The Little Hero 47
Translated by Olga Shartse
Anton Chekhov. Love 81
Translated by Graham Whittaker
Alexander Kuprin. The Garnet Bracelet 87
Translated by Stepan Apresyan
Konstantin Paustovsky. The Wind Rose 128
Translated by Graham Whittaker
Nikolai Gribachev. The Story of a First Love 140
Translated by Amanda Calvert
Yuri Kazakov. Manka 155
Translated by Bernard Isaacs
Fazil Iskander. The Letter 168
Translated by Graham Whittaker
Vasily Shukshin. The Classy Driver 188
Translated by Robert Daglish
Victor Likhonosov. Moments That Matter 206
Translated by Amanda Calvert
نکولائی نوسوف
سیاحت کی تیاری
ترجمه : تقی حیدر
تصویریں : بریس کلاؤشین
A picture story book for children.
This book by the Byelorussian author Ales Adamovich (born 1927) contains two works of documentary fiction, Khatyn and The Punitive Squads. The fate of the Byelorussian village of Khatyn during World War II closely resembled the massacres of the Czech village of Lidice, the French village of Oradour-sur-Glane, and the My Lai massacre in 1968 during the American aggression in Vietnam. All these villages, brutally wiped out along with their peaceful inhabitants, will forever symbolize, on one hand, the crimes of fascism and militarism, and on the other, the resilience of the human spirit.
In Khatyn, Adamovich portrays the horrors of fascism through the eyes of its victims, while in The Punitive Squads, he delves into the fascist psyche and illustrates the reality of Hitler’s terrifying plans, conceived as early as the 1930s: “Let the world think… that the threat to destroy the lower races was just an allegory, an exaggeration made for effect…”
Translated from the Russian by Glenys Kozlov, Frances Longman, Sharon McKee
Designed by Vladimir Gordon
You can get the book here and here.
KHATYN 5
THE PUNITIVE SQUADS. The Joy of the Knife, Or the Hyperboreans and How They Live 231
A collection of four Soviet science fiction stories.
CONTENTS
The Doubles. Translated by Raissa Bobrova 7
The Land of Inforia. Translated by Miriam Katz 157
Ends and Means. Translated by Katherine Judetson 177
The Violet. Translated by Katherine Judelson 355
Hilbert’s fourth problem, which involves finding all geometries where “ordinary lines” are “geodesics,” is both accessible and profound. While the problem can be appreciated by beginning graduate students, its solution requires tools from various branches of mathematics, including geometry, analysis, and the calculus of variations.
A partial solution was provided by Georg Hamel in 1901. Later, A. V. Pogorelov, inspired by Herbert Busemann’s idea presented at the 1966 International Congress of Mathematicians in Moscow, offered an elegant and comprehensive solution. Pogorelov’s approach, which slightly reformulates Hilbert’s problem, is celebrated for its clarity and mathematical depth.
The book is well-written, introducing necessary mathematical concepts as needed, making it accessible to readers with a foundation in advanced calculus. The English translation, reviewed by Eugene Zaustinsky, includes helpful notes guiding readers to further literature.
Pogorelov’s work is a valuable contribution to the mathematical literature, particularly for those interested in geometry and its foundations.
You can get the book here and here.
INTRODUCTION 5
SECTIONS
1. Projective Space 9
2. Projective Transformations 13
3. Desarguesian Metrizations of Projective Space 19
4. Regular Desarguesian Metrics in the Two-Dimensional Case 24
5. Averaging Desarguesian Metrics 31
6. The Regular Approximation of Desarguesian Metrics 38
7. General Desarguesian Metrics in the Two-Dimensional Case 46
8. Funk’s Problem 54
9. Desarguesian Metrics in the Three-Dimensional Case 61
10. Axioms for the Classical Geometries 68
11. Statement of Hilbert’s Problem 75
12. Solution of Hilbert’s Problem 82
NOTES 88
BIBLIOGRAPHY 93
INDEX 95
This volume is intended as a textbook for students of
mathematics and physics, at the graduate or advanced
undergraduate level. It should also be intelligible to
readers with a good background in advanced calculus
and sufficient “mathematical maturity.”
The phrase “unified approach” in the title of the book
refers to the consistent use of the Daniell scheme, which
starts from the concept of an elementary integral defined
(axiomatically) on a family of elementary functions. In
the Introduction we explain in detail why we prefer
this approach to others, in particular to the Lebesgue-
Radon-Frechet approach, which starts from axiomatic
measure theory.
Revised English Edition
Translated and Edited by Richard A. Silverman
A picture story book for children.
Dunno’s adventures in creating poetry
Drawings by Boris Kalaushin
Translated from the Russian by Margaret Wettlin
You can get the book here and here.
A picture story book for children.
Dunno’s adventures with a hot air balloon
Drawings by Boris Kalaushin
Translated from the Russian by Margaret Wettlin
Part two of a collection of Soviet Foreign policies with regard to various political events and nations.
Translated from the Russian by David Skvirsky
Compiled by A. Alexandrov, A. Blatov, V. Grubyakov, A. Dobrynin,
I. Zemskov, V. Israelyan, M. Kapitsa, I. Koblyakov, L. Kutakov,
A. Roshchin, S. Sanakoyev, V. Falin, V. Khvostov