Foto dell'autore

Nina Kosterina (1921–1941)

Autore di Diario: 1936-1941

3 opere 31 membri 2 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Comprende il nome: Nina Kostjerina

Opere di Nina Kosterina

Diario: 1936-1941 (1968) — Autore — 29 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1921
Data di morte
1941-12-19
Sesso
female
Nazionalità
Russia
Luogo di nascita
Baku, Azerbaijan, USSR
Luogo di residenza
Moscow, Russia
Attività lavorative
student
soldier
diarist
resistance fighter
Breve biografia
Nina Kosterina was born in Baku, Azerbaijan, just as the Russian Civil War was ending and the Soviet Union was getting under way. Her parents were Alexei Evgrafovich Kosterin, a Bolshevik who had spent three years in prison for his activities, and Anna Mikhailovna; the couple married sometime between 1918 and 1920. Nina was their first child.
The family
settled in Moscow by 1922, and were proud supporters of the new government. Nina began her training as a young Communist early, influenced by her family's politics and the teachings of Communist philosophy in the school system. She began keeping a diary at age 15, and soon afterwards was accepted into the Young Communist League known as the Komsomol.

In 1936, Nina's father was sent to the Russian Far East on assignment and she never saw him again. While he was away, Alexei fell out of favor with Stalin's regime and was sent to a prison gulag.

Nina graduated from secondary school in 1939, hoping to become a geologist. While she was at a summer geology camp, Nazi Germany invaded Russia during World War II. Her family evacuated from Moscow but Nina chose to return and volunteer as a student soldier. She participated in partisan missions for about a month in 1941.

In January 1942, her family was notified that she was dead. For years, they lacked details about what had happened. Then a published memoir about soldiers from the war found its way to the family -- it included an official report about her last mission. A member of Nina's unit described how a band of the partisans had slipped behind enemy lines south of Moscow near the cities of Podolsk and Narofominsk. As they went deep into the woods, they fell into a German ambush, and Nina was killed.

After the war, Nina's mother and sisters returned to Moscow and found her diary in their apartment. They kept it safe and gave it to her father after he was released from Stalin's prisons in 1955. The diary stayed private until 1962, when the family allowed a Soviet magazine to publish it. Two years later, Nina's diary appeared in Russia in book form. In 1968, it was translated into English and published in the USA, where it became a bestseller.

Utenti

Recensioni

 
Segnalato
Murtra | Nov 18, 2020 |
This is the diary of a young Russian woman who was killed during a partisan action in World War II. The editor/translator gave the bare details of Nina Kosterina's life in the preface, but didn't explain why she was important enough for her diary to be published. I'm still not really clear on that.

Nina's diary covers 1936 to 1941, age fifteen to twenty, but it's not really that long because she didn't write entries very often and sometimes weeks or months separate one entry from another. You learn about her relationships with girlfriends and with boys, her activity in Communist organizations, her relationship with her family, and her studies. She was a very good student who got a scholarship to a university in Moscow to study geology.

It might be worth comparing this book to Nina Lugovskaya's Diary of a Soviet Schoolgirl, which was written during the same period. The girls have a lot in common. They had the same first name, they were about the same age, both lived with their mother and sisters, both had their fathers accused of subversive activity and arrested, both lived in Moscow, and both apparently suffered from depression. Lugovskaya was very critical of Stalin's government, however, whereas Kosterina was a loyal Communist and a leader in the local Communist youth group.

I would recommend this book to anyone who is interested in finding out about ordinary life in Stalin's Russia during the prewar years.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
meggyweg | Apr 24, 2009 |

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Statistiche

Opere
3
Utenti
31
Popolarità
#440,253
Voto
½ 3.5
Recensioni
2
ISBN
1