Elaine Feinstein

British writer and translator
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Also known as: Elaine Cooklin
Quick Facts
Née:
Elaine Cooklin
Born:
October 24, 1930, Bootle, England
Died:
September 23, 2019
Also Known As:
Elaine Cooklin

Elaine Feinstein (born October 24, 1930, Bootle, England—died September 23, 2019) was a British writer and translator who examined her own eastern European heritage in a number of novels and collections of poetry.

Feinstein attended the University of Cambridge (B.A., 1952; M.A., 1955). Her first published work was a collection of poetry, In a Green Eye (1966). After translating some of the poetry of Marina Tsvetayeva, she began to find her own distinct voice. Her second volume of verse, The Magic Apple Tree (1971), was preceded by a novel, The Circle (1970).

Characters in Feinstein’s work are changed and controlled by their dreams and memories. In several of her books a woman searches for identity within and outside her family. One of Feinstein’s best-known novels is The Survivors (1982), a multigenerational saga of two Jewish families who flee Russia for England. Her other novels include Children of the Rose (1975), The Shadow Master (1978), All You Need (1989), Lady Chatterley’s Confession (1995), and Dark Inheritance (2000). Her volumes of poetry include The Feast of Eurydice (1980), Badlands (1986), City Music (1990), Gold (2000), and Cities (2010). In addition, Feinstein wrote biographies on several poets, notably Tsvetayeva (1987), Ted Hughes (2001), and Anna Akhmatova (2005).

Illustration of "The Lamb" from "Songs of Innocence" by William Blake, 1879. poem; poetry
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