Chkhartishvili was born in Zestafoni to a Georgian father and Jewish mother, and since 1958 has lived in Moscow. Influenced by Japanese Kabuki theatre, he joined the historical-philological branch of the Institute of Asian and African Countries of Moscow State University as an expert on Japan. He worked as assistant to the editor-in-chief of the magazine
Foreign Literature, but left in October 2000 to pursue a career as a fiction writer.
Under his given name of Grigory Chkhartishvili, he serves as editor-in-chief of the 20-volume
Anthology of Japanese Literature, chairman of the board of a large "Pushkin Library " (Soros Fund), and is the author of the book
The Writer and Suicide (Moscow, The New Literary Review, 1999). He has also contributed literary criticism and translations from Japanese, American and English literature under his own name.
Boris Akunin
Under the pseudonym
Boris Akunin, he has written many works of fiction, mainly novels and stories in the series
The Adventures of Erast Fandorin,
The Adventures of Sister Pelagia,
The Adventures of the Master (following Nicholas Fandorin, Erast's grandson), all published in Russia by Zakharov Books, and the
Roman-Kino ("Novel-Film") series set during World War I. Akunin's specialty is historical mysteries set in Imperial Russia. It was only after the first books of the Fandorin series were published to critical acclaim that the identity of
B. Akunin (i.e., Chkhartishvili) was revealed.
As Boris Akunin, Chkhartishvili has been called the "undisputed champion" of Russian crime fiction given that he "has written more than a dozen crime novels and has been widely appreciated by discerning readers . . . and has been translated into many languages." As aforementioned, Chkhartishvili "prefers to work with historical material" and his "tsarist-era detectives are positive heroes, while political terrorists are the real evildoers."
"Akunin" (??) is a Japanese word that translates loosely to "villain". In his novel
The Diamond Chariot, the author redefines an "akunin" as one who creates his own rules. The pseudonym "B. Akunin" may also allude to the anarchist Mikhail Alexandrovich Bakunin and to
Akuna, the home name of poet Anna Akhmatova.
Awards and honors
In 2000 Akunin was nominated for the Smirnoff-Booker Prize. In September 2000, Akunin was named
Russian Writer of the Year and won the "Antibooker" prize in 2000 for his Erast Fandorin novel
Coronation, or the last of the Romanovs.
In 2003 the British Crime Writers' Association placed Akunin's novel
The Winter Queen on the short list for the Dagger Award in Fiction.
Adaptations
Three Fandorin novels,
The Winter Queen,
The Turkish Gambit and
The State Counsellor, were made into big-budget Russian movies.
An English remake of
The Winter Queen is currently in production, set to be released in 2010. It was set to start filming in 2007, but the leading lady, Milla Jovovich, became pregnant.
List of Works
- Erast Fandorin series (dates are for the setting of the narrative, not publication). Each novel is assigned its own subgenre of detective fiction (conspiracy, political, etc.):
- The Winter Queen, original title Azazel / ??????? (1876). A conspiracy mystery. The 20-year old Fandorin begins his career by accidentally stumbling over a plot for world domination. [1]
- The Turkish Gambit / ???????? ?????? (1877) [2]. A spy mystery. The story is set before the backdrop of the Russo-Turkish War, in particular the Siege of Plevna.
- Murder on the Leviathan / ???????? (1878) [3]. A closed set-up mystery. The third novel in the series, but the second released in English. Set on a steamship headed from England to India.
- The Death of Achilles / ?????? ???????? (1882) [4]. A hired assassin mystery. The story unwinds from the death of Mikhail Skobelev (called Sobolev in the novel) in a Moscow hotel.
- The Jack of Spades / ??????? ????? (1886) [5]. A novella about confidence men. Fandorin hunts down a clever gang of swindlers.
- The Decorator / ????????? (1889) [6]. A novella about a maniac. After ending his string of murders in England, Jack the Ripper surfaces in Moscow.
- The State Counsellor / ???????? ???????? (1891). A political mystery. Revolutionary terrorism in late 19th-century Russia takes center stage.
- The Coronation / original title Coronation, or the Last of the Romanovs (?????????, ??? ????????? ?? ???????) (1896). A high society mystery. The plot surrounds the ascension of Tsar Nicholas II.
- She Lover of Death / ????????? ?????? (1900). A decadent mystery. A decadent suicide society causes a stir in Moscow.
- He Lover of Death / ???????? ?????? (1900). A Dickensian mystery. Set in the slums of Khitrovka, Moscow.
- The Diamond Chariot / ???????? ????????? (1905 / 1878). An ethnographic mystery. Events of the Russo-Japanese War of 1905 set against a flashback to Fandorin's diplomatic service in Yokohama.
- The Jade Rosary / ?????????? ????? (a collection of short stories and novellas set in the 19th century): Some of the "holes" in the canon are filled, including Fandorin's service in Japan, his investigations in the 1880s while a Deputy for Special Assignments in the Moscow city administration and his adventures in America.
- All the World's a Stage / ???? ??? ????? (1911). A theatrical mystery. The 55-year-old Fandorin has his life turned upside-down when investigating strange incidents in a fashionable Moscow theater.
Note: (
The Jack of Spades and
The Decorator were published together in a single volume,
The Further Adventures of Erast Fandorin / ?????? ?????????.)
- Sister Pelagia series (about a crime-solving nun in turn-of-the-20th-century provincial Russia):
- Pelagia and the White Bulldog (US title: Sister Pelagia and the White Bulldog) / ??????? ? ????? ??????? [7]
- Pelagia and the Black Monk (US title: Sister Pelagia and the Black Monk) / ??????? ? ?????? ?????
- Pelagia and the Red Rooster (US title: Sister Pelagia and the Red Cockerel) / ??????? ? ??????? ?????
- Nicholas Fandorin series (about Erast Fandorin's grandson, a modern-day British historian):
- Altyn Tolobas / ?????-??????? [8]: Nicholas visits Russia in 1995 while a story of his 17th-century ancestor is told in alternating chapters.
- Extracurricular Reading/ ??????????? ??????: Nicholas' adventures in Moscow in 2001 are told together with a story of yet another ancestor, this one set in the end of Catherine the Great's reign.
- F.M.: Nicholas is looking for a lost Dostoevsky manuscript.
- The Falcon and the Swallow / ????? ? ????????: A book within a book, based on a Treasure Island-like adventure taking place in 1702 and 2009.
- The Genres Project (novels written in different fiction genres, each book's title refers to the particular genre):
- Children's Book / ??????? ?????: Erast Fandorin Jr. (Nicholas' ten-year-old son) goes on a time-travelling adventure.
- Spy Novel / ????????? ?????: Set in 1941, just before Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union.
- Science Fiction / ??????????: Two young men cope with their mysteriously acquired superpowers in the Soviet Union's dying days.
- Quest / ?????: In 1930, an Indiana Jones-like American scientist and two of his colleagues go to Moscow in an attempt to disrupt Soviet eugenics experiments. The novel imitates a computer game. The second part of the narrative, called Codes to the Novel is set in 1812, during Napoleon's invasion of Russia.
- Brüderschaft with Death (A "cinematic novel", written as a collection of ten novellas ("films") about the rivalry between Russian and German intelligence during World War I. Each "film" is written in a different cinematic genre. There are two main characters in the series: Alexei Romanov and Sepp von Theofels). The following "films" have been released in Russian:
- The Infant and the Devil / ???????? ? ????. Comedy. July 1914. A German ace of espionage is trying to steal the plans of Russian military operations, as a young St. Petersburg student unexpectedly interferes.
- The Torment of a Broken Heart / ???? ????????? ??????. Melodrama. November 1914. Junior sergeant Alexei Romanov, sent away from the front after being wounded, takes part in an operation in Switzerland, where Russian intelligence is attempting to neutralize a "dealer in secrets."
- The Flying Elephant / ???????? ????. Aeronautic adventures. April 1915. Captain von Theofels infiltrates Russia's Special Aviation Corps in order to sabotage the development of the world's first heavy bomber, the Sikorsky Ilya Muromets.
- Children of the Moon / ???? ????. A decadent étude: August 1915. Ensign Romanov, fresh after completing the Russian General Staff's counter-intelligence course, goes undercover into a Petrograd society of young decadents. One of the members is about to transfer a copy of secret military documents to a German spy.
- The Wandering Man / ???????? ???????. Mystical. December 1915. Major von Theofels is trying to discredit the head of Russian military intelligence. To achieve his goal he is trying to get close to a mysterious "Wanderer" who greatly resembles the historical Grigory Rasputin. The Russian title plays with the double meaning of the word "????????": wandering (archaic meaning) and strange, weird.
- Let the Thunder of Victory Rumble! / ???? ??????, ??????????! Front-line sketch. April 1916. Junior lieutenant Romanov's adventures at Russia's South-Western Front, as he is trying to ensure the secrecy of the plans for the impending Brusilov Offensive.
- Non-series books:
- The Seagull / ?????, ??????? ? ???? ?????????: a reworking of Anton Chekhov's Seagull as a mystery [9]
- Comedy/Tragedy (the Tragedy is also known as "Hamlet, by B. Akunin," with "Mirror of Saint Germain" being the alternate name for the Comedy.)
- ) (a play about Erast Fandorin, set in 1882).
- Fairy Tales for Idiots / ?????? ??? ??????? [10] (a collection of short stories, not related to any of the series).
Future plans
As Akunin has indicated in interviews, the Sister Pelagia series is finished (only three books were ever planned) and so, in all likelihood, is the Nicholas Fandorin series. The other three projects will continue. In particular, he plans to write at least two more Erast Fandorin books, including one more novel and another collection of short stories and novellas, similar in structure to
The Jade Rosary and taking place entirely during the 20th century.
The Genres project will continue as well. Besides exploring new genres, Akunin plans to write sequels to
The Children's Book and
The Spy Novel, possibly co-authored with other Russian writers.
The Alexei Romanov/Sepp von Theofels series will end after 10 novellas. The remaining four novellas will be about, in chronological order, the sinking of the Russian battleship Imperatritsa Mariya, the attempt on the life of the Czar, the German operation to transport Lenin to Russia in a "sealed train", and the Women's Battalion of Death.
Anatoly Brusnikin
In November 2007, AST, one of the publishing houses with which Akunin is affiliated, came out with a historical mystery novel by a new author, Anatoly Brusnikin, called ???????? ???? (
Devyatny Spas, The Ninth Savior). Despite the fact that Brusnikin was a complete unknown, AST spent lavishly on an advertising campaign for the book, which almost immediately resulted in rumors that Brusnikin might actually be Akunin in a new disguise.
The novel is set in the late 17th and early 18th centuries (in the beginning of the reign of Peter the Great) and centers on three young Russians, a nobleman, a priest's son, and a peasant, who get involved in an investigation of a regicidal plot. Despite Akunin's denials, some readers have concluded that the literary devices used by the author and the language of the novel give reason to believe that he may have been involved in its creation. Others, however, feel that the novel is written and plotted poorly, and could not have been authored by Akunin.
The rumors about the authorship of
Devyatny Spas have also been fueled by the total secrecy surrounding the person of the author and the fact that his name, A. O. Brusnikin, is an exact anagram of Boris Akunin. AST has also released a photograph of Brusnikin, which appears to be either of a young Chkhartishvili or a computer-generated composite of several portraits, including his own.[11]
In 2010, the second Brusnikin novel was published in Russian. It is called ????? ????? ??????? (
The Hero Of a Different Time) and is set in the 1840s in the Caucasus. The theme of the novel prompted further speculation on the possibility of Akunin's involvement. This is due to the fact that both of Brusnikin's books deal with the subjects that Akunin had planned to write about but later abandoned - Peter the Great and the Caucasus War.