Andrei Evgenievich Gusev (‹See Tfd›Russian: Андрей Евгеньевич Гусев, born 27 October 1952) is a Russian writer and journalist. He is the author of 10 inventions, 23 published scientific works.[1] One of his co-authors is a winner of the Nobel Prize, a legend of the Soviet physics, the academician Alexander Prokhorov.[2]
Early life and education
Andrei Gusev was born in former Soviet Union, in Moscow. His parents were engineers. His father Evgeny Gusev was born in Chernihiv Oblast of Ukraine; his mother Rosalind Maltseva was born in Moscow.[3]
Andrei Gusev graduated the Moscow Engineering Physics Institute in 1975. The next eleven years he worked as a scientific employee (a medical physicist) in public health services. Also in these years he received a medical education.[4]
Career
In 1990 Andrei Gusev became a correspondent of the daily "Moskovskij Komsomolets". Later he worked as the special correspondent of the All-Russia "Rossiyskaya Gazeta" and dep. editor-in-chief of the youth newspaper "Stupeni".[5][6]
Andrei Gusev served as a prototype[13] for one of the main characters – Andrei Lebedev, a journalist of the newspaper Moskovskij Bogomolets, which is very similar to the famous Moskovskij Komsomolets – in the thriller novel Journalists by Sergei Aman. In the novel by the same author Everything Will Be Okay, We're All Going to Die![14] Gusev was described under his own name, as a journalist Andrei Gusev.
Personal life
Andrei Gusev lives in Moscow. He was married twice and divorced twice. His first wife, Nina Guseva (née Odnoletko), worked as a nurse; his second wife, Ivetta Sarkisyan, is a philologist by training. He has two daughters.[3]
His hobby is beekeeping.
Selected bibliography
Andrei Gusev "PRESENTATION", motley stories, Moscow, 1993.
Andrew E. Gusev "MISTER NOVELIST", stories and short stories, Moscow, 1994.