Nikolai Dejevsky was born in
a United Nations administered refugee camp in Germany in 1945,
and in '49 arrived with his parents along the highway described
in his novel Woodland of Weir, to be welcomed in central
Maine in the town of Solon. The family later joined the famous
Russian émigré colony in Richmond, location of his
novel A Myth of Messina: Echoes of Russian Richmond.
Eventually they moving to Old Town, where the author graduated
from high school to attend Cornell University. After obtaining
a master's degree at the University of Pennsylvania, Dejevsky
went on to study medieval Russian history for his PhD at Oxford
University.
Dejevsky experienced life in the Soviet Union
as the Moscow-based project manager for Reuters where he witnessed
the fall of the Iron Curtain. For many years Dejevsky pursued
a career in British publishing and journalism. He then moved to
Paris in '95, where his wife Mary was Paris Bureau Chief of The
Independent of London, followed by four years in Washington,
DC, where she was The Independent's Washington correspondent.
Retired, Dejevsky remains active as a volunteer
in various charities concerned with chronic illnesses. He is on
the editorial board of The Parkinson, the quarterly magazine
of the Parkinson's Disease Society of the UK. He and his wife
divide their time between their home in London and their holiday
home in the Languedoc region of France.
Dejevsky's poetry has received two Mervyn Peake
Awards and has been read to television audiences in Maine.
"So, to sum it all up," the author writes, "I feel Russian by roots, Londoner by accident, Francophile by inclination, and Mainer by divine intervention! As for America . . . well, the greater country would do well to follow the lead of Dirigo," Maine's motto.

-Moods and Memories
-Woodland of Weir
-A Myth of Messina