Nina Nikolaevna Green, third wife writer Alexander Green He is the author of a book of memoirs about one of the most outstanding domestic writers. Greene, the "last romantic" who considered himself a realist, thoroughly conveying the essence of human characters, died in 1932, and his posthumous fame, coming much later, snatched from the darkness of oblivion and the fragile figure of his last companion. Information about Nina Nikolaevna Green (Mironova) is extremely contradictory, despite the fact
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Nina Nikolaevna Green, third wife
writer Alexander Green He is the author of a book of memoirs about one of the most outstanding domestic writers. Greene, the "last romantic" who considered himself a realist, thoroughly conveying the essence of human characters, died in 1932, and his posthumous fame, coming much later, snatched from the darkness of oblivion and the fragile figure of his last companion.
Information about Nina Nikolaevna Green (Mironova) is extremely contradictory, despite the fact that such biased specialists as NKVD investigators were engaged in her biography. It is known that the future wife of the writer was born on October 23 (in the new style) of 1894 - either in the city of Gdov (Pskov region), or in Narva (Estonia). About how Nina Nikolaevna lived before meeting with Green, is known only from the book of her memoirs. With Alexander Stepanovich, she met in the editorial office of the newspaper "Petersburg Echo" and then, when fate brought them together finally, she did not want to marry or register with the registry office. Green, as a knight, wanted to see her as his wife and therefore in an official institution, where N.N., by her own admission, signed some paper, lured his beloved by cunning.
After several years in St. Petersburg, when prosperity was replaced by adversity, the Green family moved to Feodosia, and from there to the small town of Old Crimea, which played a fatal role in the fate of Nina Nikolaevna. In a place where everyone was in plain sight, Greene's wife caught everyone's eye with the sophistication of her outfits, her unlikeness to others, her desire to live by her own rules. After Alexander Stepanovich died of an incurable disease in a tiny house on Karl Liebknecht Street, Nina Nikolaevna builds a luxurious mansion on the same site as the house, marries the famous and wealthy doctor P. Nania and opens a sun hospital. This period of her life ends with the beginning of the war and the occupation of Old Crimea by the fascists. Nina Nikolaevna becomes the head of the German printing house, Hitler’s officers are apartmented in her house, and countrymen, from small to large, consider Green’s wife a traitor.
For treason to the motherland in 1945, Nina Nikolaevna is arrested, she spends ten years in Stalinist camps, and then returns to Old Crimea. During her life, she was allowed to stay in the newly rebuilt house of Green, and after her death, in 1970, a branch of the Feodosia Museum of the writer appeared here. The will to be buried next to Alexander Stepanovich remained unfulfilled: the authorities of Old Crimea did not give permission for this.
It is believed that a year after the death of Nina Nikolaevna was reburied by her executors secretly, but officially this fact is not confirmed.
In 2005, the Koktebel Publishing House published the book "Memories of Alexander Green" - a literaryly processed manuscript by Nina Nikolaevna. /