Krasnaya Nov

''Red Virgin Soil'') was a Soviet monthly literary magazine.

[1][2] Krasnaya Nov, the first Soviet "thick" literary magazine, was established in June 1921.

In its first 7 years, under editor-in-chief Alexander Voronsky, it reached a circulation of 15,000 copies, publishing works of the leading Soviet authors, including Maxim Gorky, Vladimir Mayakovsky, and Sergey Yesenin, as well as essays on politics, economics, and science by authors like Lenin, Stepanov-Skvortsov, Bukharin, Frunze and Radek, among others.

He was replaced first by an editorial board consisting of Vladimir Vasilyevsky, Vladimir Fritsche and Fyodor Raskolnikov (summer 1927–spring 1929), then chief editor Fyodor Raskolnikov (1929–1930), Ivan Bespalov (1930–1931), and Alexander Fadeyev (1931–1942), the latter bringing the circulation figures up to 45,000.

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Five year anniversary of Krasnaya Nov June 1926; sitting left to right: Georgy Chulkov , Vikenty Veresaev , Christian Rakovsky , Boris Pilnyak , Aleksandr Voronsky , Petr Oreshin, Karl Radek and Pavel Sakulin; standing left to right: Ivan Evdokimov, Vasily Lvov-Rogachevsky, Vyacheslav Polonsky , Fedor Gladkov , Mikhail Gerasimov , Abram Ėfros and Isaac Babel