Dorinda "Dori" Sanders is an African-American novelist, food writer and farmer. Her first novel, Clover (1990), was a bestseller, and won a 1990 Lillian Smith Book Award. She has also written a cookbook, Dori Sanders' Country Cooking, that mixes recipes and anecdotes.
Dorian Rottenberg was a translator of Russian literature, specializing in the translation of poetry and children's books. Selected translations include:Fifty Soviet Poets by Vladimir Ognev and Dorian Rottenberg
Selected Works
Tales from M. Saltykov-Shchedrin
Selected Works
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (Mayakovsky)
Sarybelli, Osman and Ibrahimov, Mirza (editors). Azerbaijanian poetry : an anthology : classic, modern, traditional. Moscow : Progress Publishers. [662] p. Translated by Tom Botting, Gladys Evans, Olga Moisseyenko, Arthur Shkarovsky, Irina Zheleznova, Louis Zellikoff, Dorian Rottenberg, Eugene Felgenhauer, and Avril Pyman.
Aitmatov, Chinghiz and Pankov, Alexander (editors). Do the Russians want war? : collection. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1985. [326] p. Series title: A library of Russian and Soviet fact fiction. Translated by Thomas Cogbill, Robert Daglish, Olga Shartse, Peter Tempest, Sergei Sosinsky, Dudley Hagen, Bernard Isaacs, Fainna Glagoleva, Leonard Stoklitsky, Hilda Perham, Walter May, Dorian Rottenberg, Stephen Coppen, and Tom Botting.
Yakovlev, B. V. (editor). Lenin in Soviet poetry : a poetical chronicle. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1980. 318 p. Series title: Lenin in Soviet Literature. Translated by Irina Zheleznova, Dorian Rottenberg, David Foreman, Peter Tempest, Gladys Evans, Alexei Sosinsky, Alex Miller, Robert Daglish, Margaret Wettlin, Tom Botting, and Jack Lindsay.
Lazarev, L. (editor). Let the living remember : Soviet war poetry. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1975. [400] p. Series title: Progress Soviet authors library. Translated by Alex Miller, Olga Shartse, Tom Botting, Walter May, Margaret Wettlin, Peter Tempest, Avril Pyman, Dorian Rottenberg, Gladys Evans, Irina Zheleznova, Louis Zellikoff, and Alex Miller.
Malashenko, V. I. and Sobolov, I. (editors). The Great Baikal-Amur Railway. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1977. [171] p. Series title: The writer and the time. Translated by David Sinclair-Loutit, Dorian Rottenberg, Keith Hammond, and Janet Butler.
Sinelnikov, Mikhail (editor). The liberation of Europe. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1989. [392] p. Series title: Prose, poetry, journalism, memoirs of World War II. Translated by Dorian Rottenberg, Armorer Wason, Vic Schneierson, N. Joel, Richard Dixon, N. Lukoshkova, Synthia Carlile, George Hanna, David Mishne, Walter May, Vladimir Bogomolov, Dudley Hagen, Nancy R. Lasse, Martin Parker, Keith Hammond, Robert Daglish, Blair Scruton, and Maureen Riley.
Zheleznova, Irina (editor). Vasilisa the beautiful : Russian fairy tales. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 2nd ed., 1974. [213] p. Translated by Irina Zheleznova, Bernard Isaacs, and Dorian Rottenberg.
Barto, Agnia. Merry Rhymes. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 2nd ed., 1980. [80] p. Translated by Dorian Rottenberg, Avril Pyman, Eugene Felgenhauer, Irina Zheleznova, and Lois Zelikoff.
Chukovsky, Kornei. The muddle. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 2nd ed., 1980. Translated by Dorian Rottenberg.
Chukovsky, Kornei. The telephone. Moscow : Foreign Languages Publishing House. Series title: For tiny tots. Translated by D. Rottenberg.
Emin, Gevorg. Songs of Armenia : selected poems. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1979. [206] p. Translated by Dorian Rottenberg.
Mayakovsky, Vladimir. Poems. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1972. [278] p. Translated by Dorian Rottenberg.
Mayakovsky, Vladimir. Poems. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 2nd ed., 1976. 302 p. Series title: Progress Soviet authors library. Translated by Dorian Rottenberg.
Mayakovsky, Vladimir. Rottenberg, Dorian (editor). Selected poetry. Moscow : Foreign Languages Publishing House. [133] p. Translated by Dorian Rottenberg.
Metchenko, Alexei, Kozhinov, Vadim, Pluchek, Valentin, Rostotsky, Boleslav, Ushakov, Alexander, Pertsov, Victor, Pitzkel, Fainna, Lunacharsky, Anatoly, Chukovsky, Kornei, Pasternak, Boris, Ehrenburg, Ilya, Aseyev, Nikolai, Olesha, Yuri, Svetlov, Mikhail, Fadeyev, Alexander, Tikhonov, Nikolai, Smelyakov, Yaroslav, Tychina, Pavlo, Vurgun, Samed, Faizi, Akhmed, Lukonin, Mikhail, Gamzatov, Rasul, Miezelaitis, Eduardas, and Narovchatov, Sergei. Vladimir Mayakovsky : innovator. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1976. 312 p. Translated by Alex Miller and Dorian Rottenberg.
Obraztsov, Sergei. My profession. Moscow : Foreign Languages Publishing House. [255] p. Series title: Arts library. Translated by Ralph Parker, Valentina Scott, and Dorian Rottenberg.
Saltykov-Shchedrin, M. Tales from M. Saltykov-Shchedrin. Moscow : Foreign Languages Publishing House. [199] p. Series title: Classics of Russian literature. Translated by Dorian Rottenberg.
Tvardovsky, Alexander. Tvardovskaya, M. (editor). Selected poetry. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1981. 478 p. Series title: Progress Soviet authors library. Translated by Peter Tempest, Alex Miller, Dorian Rottenberg, and A. Leksis. 8570 copies have been printed.
Dorion Sagan is an American essayist, fiction writer, poet, and theorist of ecology. He has written and co-authored books on culture, art, literature, evolution, and the history and philosophy of science, including Cosmic Apprentice, Cracking the Aging Code, and Lynn Margulis: The Life and Legacy of a Scientific Rebel.
Doris Gates was one of America's first writers of realistic children's fiction. Her novel Blue Willow, about the experiences of Janey Larkin, the ten-year-old daughter of a migrant farm worker in 1930s California, is a Newbery Honor book and Lewis Carroll Shelf Award winner. A librarian in Fresno, California, Gates lived and worked among the people described in her novels. She is also known for her collections of Greek mythology.
Doris M. Grumbach was an American novelist, memoirist, biographer, literary critic, and essayist. She taught at the College of Saint Rose in Albany, New York, the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and American University in Washington, D.C., and was literary editor of The New Republic for several years. She published many novels highlighting and focusing on gay and lesbian characters. For two decades, she and her partner, Sybil Pike, operated a bookstore, Wayward Books, in Sargentville, Maine.
Doris Helen Kearns Goodwin is an American biographer, historian, former sports journalist, and political commentator. She has written biographies of numerous U.S. presidents Goodwin's book No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II won the Pulitzer Prize for History in 1995. Goodwin produced the American television miniseries Washington. She was also executive producer of 'Abraham Lincoln,' a 2022 docudrama on the History Channel. This latter series was based on Goodwin's Leadership in Turbulent Times.
Doris Leslie, was a British novelist and historical biographer. Her novel Peridot Flight (1956) was serialised in 10 episodes by BBC TV in October–December 1960.
Doris May Lessing was a British novelist. She was born to British parents in Iran, where she lived until 1925. Her family then moved to Southern Rhodesia, where she remained until moving in 1949 to London, England. Her novels include The Grass Is Singing (1950), the sequence of five novels collectively called Children of Violence (1952–1969), The Golden Notebook (1962), The Good Terrorist (1985), and five novels collectively known as Canopus in Argos: Archives (1979–1983).