Irina Grekova

Elena Sergeevna Ventsel (maiden name Dolgintsova, 21 March 1907, Reval - 15 April 2002, Moscow), known by the pen name Irina Grekova (often shortened to I. Grekova), was a Russian writer.[1] She was also a PhD in mathematics, and wrote a book on probability theory.[2]

Biography

Her father taught mathematics and her mother taught literature. Believing that higher mathematics was actually simpler than arithmetic, he began giving her lessons when she was only seven or eight.

In 1923, when she was sixteen, she entered Petrograd University (now Saint Petersburg State University), where she studied with Boris Delaunay, Ivan Vinogradov, Gury Kolosov and Grigorii Fichtenholz, among others. In 1929, she graduated from the Physics and Mathematics Department.

From 1935 to 1969, she worked at the Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy then, from 1969 to 1987, at the Moscow State University of Railway Engineering. She began writing prose in 1962 and became a member of the Union of Soviet Writers in 1967.

Her husband, Dimitri Ventsel, was a Major General and head of the ballistics department at the Air Force Academy

In 2003, her novel Hostess was filmed as Bless the Woman; directed by Stanislav Govorukhin.

Works in English

  • The Ship of Widows, translated by Cathy Porter, European Classics ISBN 0-8101-1144-6
  • Russian Women (Two Stories), translated by Michel Petrov, HBJ ISBN 0-15179-056-6
  • Wentzel E. Probability Theory (first steps) (Imported Pubn, 1975) ISBN 082853196X ISBN 978-0828531962
  • Elena S. Wentzel Operations Research MIR, 1983 ISBN 5030002278 ISBN 978-5030002279
  • E. Wentzel and L. Ovcharov Applied Problems in Probability Theory, Mir Publishers, 1987 ISBN 0828533229 ISBN 978-0828533225

References

  1. Christine Rydel Russian Prose Writers After World War II 2005 - Volume 302 - Page 116 Irina Grekova (pseudonym of Elena Sergeevna Venttsel') ranks among the most prominent women writers in Soviet literature. ... Grekova was born Elena Sergeevna Dolgintsova on 21 March 1907 in Reval (now known as Tallinn, the capital of Estonia) into a ...
  2. Cathy Porter, introduction to 'The Ship of Widows', Irina Grekova, 1981, English translation by Cathy Porter 1985, Virago
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