Ivan Turgenev | Ivan Caryll | Ivan Lendl | Ivan Vazov | Ivan the Terrible | Ivan Shapovalov | Iván Rodríguez | Ivan Reitman | Ivan Pavlov | Ivan Lins | Hurricane Ivan | Ivan Krylov | Ivan Franko | Ivan Tors | Ivan Basso | Ivan Vladislavic | Ivan Neville | Ivan Meštrović | Ivan Varichev | Ivan Sergei | Ivan Panfilov | Ivan Kostov | Ivan Galamian | Iván Campo | Keith Bunin | Ivan Stang | Ivan's Childhood | Ivan Rybkin | Ivan Pregelj | Ivan Paskevich |
Dark Avenues (or Dark Alleys, Russian: «Тёмные аллеи», Tyomnyye allei) is a collection of short stories by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin written in 1937–1944, mostly in Grasse, France, first 11 novellas of which were published in New York, United States, in 1943.
He is most notable for being one of the main translators into Chinese of the works of the Russian poets Alexander Pushkin, Ivan Bunin, Mikhail Lermontov and Anna Akhmatova.
By the end of the 19th century, the settlement was inhabited by such renowned representatives of Russian arts and literature as Anton Chekhov, Maxim Gorky, Ivan Bunin, and Feodor Chaliapin.
Many Russian writers described Tverskoy Boulevard in their books, for example Leo Tolstoy, Anton Chekhov, Ivan Bunin, Alexander Pushkin and Mikhail Bulgakov.