ELKOST International literary agency
Toggle Navigation
  • News
  • Authors A-M
    • Yuri Borisov
      • Books
      • Sample translations
    • Yuri Buida
      • Books
      • Media reviews
      • Sample translations
    • Ksenia Buksha
      • Books
    • Ivan Chistyakov
      • Books
      • Media reviews
      • Sample translations
    • Alexander Chudakov
      • Books
      • Sample translations
    • Marietta Chudakova
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Oleg Dorman
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Umberto Eco
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Ilya Ehrenburg
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Andrei Gelasimov
      • Books
    • Fazil Iskander
      • Books
      • Media reviews
      • Sample translations
    • Andrei Ivanov
      • Books
      • Media reviews
      • Sample translations
    • Kirill Kobrin
      • Books
    • Andrei Kofman
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Nikolai Kononov
      • Books
    • Elena Kostioukovitch
      • Books
      • Media reviews
      • Interviews
    • Maya Kucherskaya
      • Books
      • Media reviews
      • Interviews
    • Yuri Lotman
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Alexander Luria
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Józef Mackiewicz
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Vladimir Makanin
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Olga Medvedkova
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • MEMORIAL
    • Agnes Mironova
      • Books
      • Sample translations
    • Ilya Mitrofanov
      • Books
      • Media reviews
  • Authors N-Z
    • Victor Nekrasov
      • Books
    • Alexander Okun
      • Books
    • Yuri Olesha
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Vladislav Otroshenko
      • Books
      • Media reviews
      • Interviews
      • Sample translations
    • Sergey Parkhomenko
      • Books
      • Sample translations
    • Mariam Petrosyan
      • Books
      • Media reviews
      • Interviews
      • Sample translations
    • Elena Rzhevskaya
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Natalya Semenova
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Irina Sherbakova
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Mikhail Shevelev
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Viktor Shklovsky
    • Grigory Sluzhitel
      • Books
    • Sasha Sokolov
      • Books
      • Media reviews
      • Interviews
      • Sample translations
    • Ludmila Ulitskaya
      • Books
      • Media reviews
      • Interviews
      • Journalism
      • Sample translations
    • Sana Valiulina
      • Books
    • Marina Vishnevetskaya
      • Books
      • Media reviews
    • Igor Vishnevetsky
      • Books
      • Media reviews
      • Sample translations
    • Stanislav Vostokov
      • Books
    • Guzel Yakhina
      • Books
    • Anthologies & series
      • Creative comparison of cultures
  • Our sub-agents
  • Our clients
  • About us

News

  • facebook
  • twitter
  • email
  • instagram
  • Linkedin
  • XING
  • Print
  • Whatsapp
  • Telegram

Featured titles

  • OST: A Lifelong Curse. Fate of Ostarbeiters during and after the WWII in documents, letters, and recorded oral memories (NF)

    Winner of the 2021 Jan Michalski Prize
    Winner of the 2017 Enlightener Prize (Russia)

    Rights sold Germany - Ch. Links Verlag, World English - GRANTA BOOKS

    Ostarbeiter ("Eastern worker" in German) was a Nazi German designation for foreign slave workers gathered from occupied Central and Eastern Europe to perform forced labor in Germany during World War II. Deportations of civilians commenced at the beginning of the war and reached unprecedented levels following Operation Barbarossa of 1941. Over 50% of Ostarbeiters were formerly Soviet subjects: ethnic Ukrainians, Poles, Belarusians, Russians, Tatars, and others. Estimates of the number of Ostarbeiters range between 3 million and 5.5 million. All Ostarbeiters workers were required to wear an identification patch with "Ost."

    By 1944, most new workers were very young, under the age of 16, as those older than that were usually conscripted for service in Germany; 30% were as young as 12–14 years of age when they were taken from their homes. The age limit was dropped to 10 in November 1943.

    Since about half of the adolescents were female, Ostarbeiters were often the victims of rape and tens of thousands of pregnancies due to rape occurred. Ostarbeiters were often given starvation rations and were forced to live in guarded camps. Many died from starvation, overwork, bombing (they were denied access to bomb shelters), abuse and execution carried out by their German overseers.

    Following the war, over 2.5 million liberated Ostarbeiters were repatriated, many of them against their will, and in the USSR they suffered from social ostracization as well as deportation to gulags for "re-education." American authorities banned the repatriation of Ostarbeiters in October, 1945 and some immigrated to the U.S. as well as other non eastern-bloc countries.

    In 2000, the German government and thousands of German companies paid a one-time payment of over € 5 billion to Ostarbeiter victims of the Nazi regime.

    This is the first and only serious full-scale historical research on Ostarbeiters in existence. The book is based on Soviet archive documents and more than two hundred personal testimonies, hundreds of hours of interviews tape-recorded by the Memorial employees, and over  350,000 letters kept in the Memorial Society archives. Thematically organized material offers the exhaustive treatment.

    Read more...
  • Two sisters and Kandinsky, a novel by Vladimir Makanin (2011)

    Rights sold:

    Makanin’s novel Two Sisters and Kandinsky (2011) is a special genre structure based on the sophisticated play of classical and modern hybrid forms. Besides the genre definition as “a novel” stated by the author and specifying it as “a scene of life” oriented to Balzac genre form, the reportage and essays inclusions are significant in the novel as well. Dramatic code is actualized there not only in its classical variant, but also in the form of puppet theatre, contemporary talk-show, and other genres of film and television.

    In Makanin's previous novel about the Chechen War, Asan (2008), the concept of "betrayal" had a structure-forming function. His next novel Two Sisters and Kandinsky (2011) placed the concept of "betrayal" into the context of a story of an individual human being and of the Russian society of the 20th century, when a snitch (betrayer) was the most important figure in the state. In Makanin's prose, in contrast to the narrow political interpretation widespread in the society, almost all types and kinds of betrayal are present: starting from betrayal in personal relations between a man and a woman, betrayal of a friend, violation of a social contract, betrayal of a strata or a state, and coming to the most terrible in the opinion of the writer ego-betrayal, i.e. oblivion of one's ideals and principles (the most terrible in the opinion of the writer). We may affirm that the dyad "loyalty – betrayal" is the core in Makanin's world view, and "loyalty" is almost of a sacred character, and "recovery" of the society is possible only if it returns to a new "sacrum".

    Read more...

MAIN OFFICE: Yulia Dobrovolskaya, c/Londres, 78, 6-1, 08036 Barcelona, Spain, phone 0034 63 9413320, 0034 93 3221232, e-mail rights@elkost.com
OFFICE IN ITALY: Elena Kostioukovitch, via Sismondi 5, Milano 20133, Italy, phone 0039 02 87236557, 0039 346 5064334, fax 0039 700444601, e-mail elkost@elkost.com
General inquiries and manuscript submissions: russianoffice@elkost.com

Aviso legal. Política de privacidad. Política de cookies.

Back to Top

© 2026 ELKOST International literary agency

In order to provide you with the best online experience this website uses cookies.

By using our website, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more

I agree