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Umka

The True Story Of My Life Written By Myself In Bad English

I was born as Anna Gerasimova in Moscow, 19 April 1961, a week after Gagarin's flight; the heroes of my childhood were Gagarin, Fidel Castro, The Three Musketeers and Winnie the Pooh. I loved books and dreamed to become a great writer. I loved singing, too, and attended a children's choir. Playing piano was not my strongest point; several years of training caused a severe allergy for classical music. At the age of 13 I got my first guitar, the cheapest acoustic monster made in USSR, and taught myself some chords. To be honest, my skill hasn't improved a lot since then. Combining good pitch with laziness, I was able to accompany my singing, and that was enough. My first songs were very few and funny; what I used to sing was mostly Vyssotsky, Okudjava and something from "Jesus Christ Superstar"; being an average Soviet girl, I knew very little about rock'n'roll. At school, I never worked really hard, but everything came easy to me, and I always had some time for reading and writing (be sure that my first opuses were quite awful). In 1978, I graduated as the best pupil and entered Moscow Literature Institute, Dept. of Translation. I translated some poetry from German, English and French, but mostly from Lithuanian, my second language since my childhood: my parents, Bella Zalesskaya and Georgy Gerasimov, worked many years translating Lithuanian literature and promoting it in Russia and other republics. In the Institute, I was also one of the best students, even with less effort than at school; I've already found some bad company and was at last introduced to drinking, smoking, hitchhiking, and of course rock'n'roll. Some of my new pals wore long hair and torn jeans, being excitingly and dangerously beautiful, and I wanted to be one of them. Soon, though, I had to stop for a brief student marriage, resulting in two broken hearts and a nice little boy, my son Alex, who grew up to be my best mate in hiking, talking and thinking. He is still one of my closest friends. After graduation in 1983, I was left in the Institute to write a dissertation. My goal was to entertain myself rather than to become a Ph.D., so I chose for my studies a group of avant-garde writers of the 1930s. They had lived in Leningrad, calling themselves OBERIU (The Real Art Foundation), almost never coming overground, and had been killed, almost all of them, by Stalin regime.

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