Boris Akunin

Writer

Birthday May 20, 1956

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Zestaponi, Georgian SSR, Soviet Union

Age 67 years old

Nationality Russia

#59248 Most Popular

1956

Boris Akunin (Борис Акунин) is the pen name of Grigori Chkhartishvili (Григорий Шалвович Чхартишвили; გრიგორი ჩხარტიშვილი, born 20 May 1956), a Georgian-Russian writer residing in Britain.

He is best known as a writer of detective and historical fiction.

He is also an essayist and literary translator.

Grigory Chkhartishvili has also written under pen names Anatoly Brusnikin, Anna Borisova, and Akunin-Chkhartishvili.

His characters include Erast Fandorin, Nicholas Fandorin and Sister Pelagia.

Chkhartishvili was born on 20 May 1956 in Zestaponi to a Georgian father and a Jewish mother.

1958

He moved to Moscow in 1958.

1998

Since 1998 he has been writing fiction under the pseudonym “B.

Akunin", decoding "B" as "Boris" a few years later in an interview. "Akunin" (悪人) is a Japanese word that translates to "great bad man". In his novel The Diamond Chariot, the author redefines an "akunin" as a great evil man who creates his own rules.

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.

1999

Under his given name of Grigory Chkhartishvili, he was editor-in-chief of the 20-volume Anthology of Japanese Literature, chairman of the board of a large "Pushkin Library”, 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.

He publishes other critical and documentary works under his real name.

2000

Chkhartishvili 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.

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 was engaged in literary translation from Japanese and English.

Japanese authors Yukio Mishima, Kenji Maruyama, Yasushi Inoue, Masahiko Shimada, Kobo Abe, Shinichi Hoshi, Takeshi Kaiko, Shohei Ooka were published in his translation, as well as representatives of American and English literature (T. C. Boyle, Malcolm Bradbury, Peter Ustinov, etc.).

In the year 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 2000 for his Erast Fandorin novel Coronation, or the last of the Romanovs.

2003

In 2003, the British Crime Writers' Association placed Akunin's novel The Winter Queen on the short list for the Dagger Award in Fiction.

2012

In 2012, Putin attributed Akunin's critical attitudes to his Georgian background.

Akunin participated in a fundraiser in 2022 to benefit Russians accused of "discrediting" the Russian army under the Russian 2022 war censorship laws.

In December 2023, the pranksters Vovan and Lexus called Akunin and Dmitry Bykov, pretending to be representatives of the Ukrainian Government, and released the recordings of Akunin and Bykov expressing their support for Ukraine.

The response in Russia was negative: many Russian publishing booksellers, including publishing company AST, ceased publication and distribution of Akunin's and Bykov's works.

One of the few booksellers that continued to distribute Akunin's books, Zakharov Books, came under investigation by the Investigative Committee of Russia.

Russian politician Andrey Gurulyov called Akunin an "enemy" that "must be destroyed".

Akunin was then added by Rosfinmonitoring to its list of terrorists and extremists, with Akunin specifically believed to be complicit in terrorist activity by the Russian Government.

The government also opened a criminal case against Akunin, with allegations of discreditation of the Russian army.

In response, Akunin wrote on Facebook: "Terrorists declared me a terrorist."

In an article on his website, Akunin has warned Russians abroad to not return to Russia.

In January 2024, Akunin was designated a "foreign agent" by the Russian Ministry of Justice.

This designation requires that the subject identify themselves as a "foreign agent" on social media and any other publications, and imposes heavy financial reporting requirements.

Later that month, Russia's Interior Ministry put his name on a wanted list for alleged criminal activity.

On 6 February 2024, a Moscow court ordered the arrest of Akunin in absentia.

After the death of Alexei Navalny, Akunin said that "There is nothing more the dictator [Putin] can do to Navalny. Navalny is dead and has become immortal."

2014

Akunin lived in Moscow until 2014.

He has since lived in Britain, France, and Spain.

he is living in London.

Chkhartishvili has been called by Igor Pomerantsev the "undisputed champion" of Russian crime fiction, given that as Boris Akunin he "has written more than a dozen crime novels and has been widely appreciated by discerning readers ... and has been translated into many languages."

Akunin has been critical of Vladimir Putin's domestic and foreign policies, including the annexation of Crimea in 2014.