Sally Laird
Sally Laird | |
|---|---|
| Born | 2 May 1956[1] |
| Died | 15 July 2010 (aged 54)[1] |
| Occupations | writer and translator |
| Children | 1[1] |
Sally Ann Laird (2 May 1956 – 15 July 2010) was a British editor and translator who specialised in Russian literature.
Education
[edit | edit source]Laird was born in the London Borough of Barnet and attended Camden School for Girls.[1][2] She was a student of Russian and philosophy at St Anne's College, Oxford.[1][3] She was editor of The Isis Magazine at Oxford.[1] Laird went on to Harvard University, on a Harkness Fellowship, where she gained an MA in Soviet studies in 1981.[1][3] As part of her Oxford degree, she spent a year at Voronezh State University.[1][2][3]
Career
[edit | edit source]Laird worked for Amnesty International during the 1980s.[1][2] She was USSR editor for the magazine Index on Censorship between June 1986 and November 1988, when she became editor-in-chief.[1][2][4] She held the job until August 1989.
After leaving the magazine she worked as a translator and editor, and reviewed books for The Observer.[2] She translated a series of Russian novels.[4] The Washington Post reviewed her translation of Lyudmila Petrushevskaya's The Time: Night: "Sally Laird's version, although a bit British and a bit bowdlerized, conveys the wonderful fluidity and occasional frenzy of the monologue "written" by Petrushevskaya's narrator".[5]
Laird became project manager of the Central European Classics series, brought out by Central European University Press.[1][6]
She contributed to Till my Tale is Told: Women’s Memoirs of the Gulag, and wrote Voices of Russian Literature: Interviews with Ten Contemporary Writers, the latter based on interviews she carried out between 1987 and 1994.[4][7]
In 1993, Laird moved to Denmark, living at Ebeltoft.[1][4] She learnt Danish and worked as a translator between English and Danish.[1]
Personal life
[edit | edit source]Laird and her husband Mark Le Fanu had one daughter.[1][4] Laird died in 2010.[1][4]
Writing
[edit | edit source]- Translation of The Queue, by Vladimir Sorokin (Readers International, 1988; New York Review Books, 2008; Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).)
- Translation of The Time: Night, by Ludmila Petrushevskaya (Pantheon Books, 1994)
- Translation of Immortal Love: Stories, by Ludmilla Petrushevskaya (Pantheon Books, 1996)[8]
- Voices of Russian Literature: Interviews with Ten Contemporary Writers (Oxford University Press, 1999)
- Till my Tale is Told: Women’s Memoirs of the Gulag, ed Simeon Vilensky, (Indiana University Press, 1999)
References
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External links
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- 1956 births
- 2010 deaths
- Alumni of the University of Oxford
- Harvard University alumni
- British editors
- British women editors
- Russian–English translators
- 20th-century British translators
- British women writers
- 20th-century women writers
- People from the London Borough of Barnet
- Alumni of St Anne's College, Oxford
- Amnesty International people
- People from Ebeltoft
- People educated at Camden School for Girls
- Harkness Fellows