Russian Writers - Statistics

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  • The average score is 20 of 28
Answer Stats
Picture Hint Answer % Correct
Often regarded as the founder of modern Russian literature. Known for his poetry, plays, and novels, including Eugene Onegin and Boris Godunov (1799–1837) Alexander Pushkin
100%
Playwright and short story writer renowned for his contributions to modern drama. Known for his plays The Cherry Orchard, The Seagull (1860-1904) Anton Chekhov
100%
One of the greatest novelists of all time, known for exploring the depths of the human psyche. Major works include Crime and Punishment, The Brothers Karamazov, The Idiot, and Demons (1821-1881) Fyodor Dostoyevsky
100%
A novelist and playwright, popularized Russian literature in the west. Major work "Fathers and Sons" (1818-1883) Ivan Turgenev
100%
Considered one of the world's greatest novelists. Renowned for War and Peace and Anna Karenina, which are monumental works of Russian and world literature (1828-1910) Leo Tolstoy
100%
Romantic writer, poet, and painter, best known for his novel A Hero of Our Time and his poetry that often explored themes of fate, nature, and the individual (1814-1841) Mikhail Lermontov
100%
A novelist, playwright, and short story writer. Famous works include Dead Souls, The Overcoat, and The Government Inspector (1809-1852) Nikolai Gogol
100%
A novelist, poet, and translator who wrote both in Russian and English. Best known for his novel Lolita (1899-1977) Vladimir Nabokov
100%
A Nobel Prize-winning author who exposed the horrors of the Soviet labor camps. Major works include One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich and The Gulag Archipelago (1918-2008) Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
80%
A poet, novelist, and translator best known for his novel Doctor Zhivago, for which he won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1958 (1890-1960) Boris Pasternak
80%
A key figure in Russian socialist realism and a founder of the Socialist Realist literary method. Important works include the novel "Mother" (1868-1936) Maxim Gorky
80%
A novelist and playwright known for his satirical and fantastical works. His masterpiece, The Master and Margarita, is a landmark of Russian literature (1891-1940) Mikhail Bulgakov
80%
Historian, writer, and reformer of the Russian literary language, best known for his multi-volume History of the Russian State and for pioneering the sentimentalist movement in Russian literature (1766-1826) Nikolay Karamzin
80%
A lyrical poet known for his depictions of Russian rural life and his romantic, often melancholic poetry (1895-1925) Sergei Yesenin
80%
A leading figure in Russian Futurism, known for his revolutionary and avant-garde poetry (1893-1930) Vladimir Mayakovsky
80%
Poet whose work, characterized by its emotional depth and lyrical beauty, powerfully captured the personal and collective suffering experienced during the Stalinist terror (1889-1966) Anna Akhmatova
60%
Poet and statesman, celebrated for his sophisticated, lyrical odes that blended classical influences with a distinct Russian style, marking him as one of the greatest poets of the Russian Enlightenment (1743-1816) Gavrila Derzhavin
60%
A short story writer and playwright known for his works on the Russian Civil War and Jewish life. Famous for his Red Cavalry stories and Odessa Tales (1894-1940) Isaac Babel
60%
A novelist, short story writer, and poet, and the first Russian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1933 (1870-1953) Ivan Bunin
60%
A fabulist and poet often referred to as the "Russian La Fontaine" for his fables, which are still popular in Russia (1769-1844) Ivan Krylov
60%
Nobel Prize laureate (1965), known for his epic novel And Quiet Flows the Don, which chronicles the lives of Don Cossacks before and during the Russian Revolution (1905-1984) Mikhail Sholokhov
60%
Ukrainian poet, artist, and national hero whose literary works, particularly his poetry written in Ukrainian, played a pivotal role in shaping Ukrainian national identity (1814-1861) Taras Shevchenko
60%
A leading poet of the Russian Symbolist movement. His works explore themes of love, mysticism, and the Russian Revolution (1880-1921) Alexander Blok
40%
Ukrainian writer, poet, scholar, and political activist, regarded as one of the most influential figures in Ukrainian literature and culture (1856-1916) Ivan Franko
40%
A poet and essayist, awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1987. His poetry often explores themes of exile, loss, and the passage of time (1940-1996) Joseph Brodsky
40%
Russian poet, she lived through and wrote about the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the subsequent Moscow famine. Known for her intense, passionate verse and her exploration of themes such as love and exile (1892-1941) Marina Tsvetaeva
40%
Russian romantic poet and diplomat, celebrated for his deeply philosophical and nature-inspired lyric poetry, which reflects themes of love, death, and the sublime (1803-1873) Fyodor Tyutchev
20%
Ukrainian poet, playwright, and literary critic, renowned for her work that addressed themes of political oppression, national identity (1871-1913) Lesya Ukrainka
20%
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