Borys Khersonsky (b. 1950) is a Jewish-Ukrainian poet, professor of clinical psychology, and practicing psychiatrist. Under Soviet rule, he was a dissident in Odesa and participated in the samizdat movement, which disseminated alternative, non-conformist literature. He is the author of over thirty books of poetry including Family Archive (2006), Bow to the Tree (2019), and Printout (2020). Having written in Russian for much of his career and held membership in PEN Russia, Khersonsky broke with the Russian literary scene in 2014 amid Ukraine’s Revolution of Dignity, Russia’s annexation of Crimea and initiation of war in the Donbas. Since then, he has written in both Ukrainian and Russian to critical acclaim and recognition from the Shevchenko National Prize in literature. His poetry has been translated into over twenty languages. Queen Saturday is his first full-length book in English.
Svetlana Lavochkina is a Ukrainian-born novelist, poet, literary translator and Waldorf teacher based in Germany since 1999. She writes in English. Her poetry and fiction have been published and translated internationally. Lavochkina was a prize-winner in the 2013 Paris Literary Prize and finalist in the 2015 Tibor Jones Pageturner Prize. Her verse novel Carbon (Lost Horse Press, 2020) in self-translation was runner-up for the 2022 Krylaty Lev International Lviv Literary Prize. Lavochkina has been translating 20th-century and contemporary Ukrainian poetry for fifteen years. Her translation of Dmytro Kremin’s poetry collection A Violin from the Other Riverside (Lost Horse Press, 2023) was awarded the 2025 Panteleimon Kulish International Literary-Artistic Prize. Since the onset of Russia’s full-scale invasion, Lavochkina has been working to raise awareness for Ukraine in German-language mass media and collaborating on interdisciplinary projects, including Shigeru Ban’s Paper Sanctuaries: Pragmatism & Poetry for Ukrainian Refugees for the London Design Biennale 2023.
Oksana Rosenblum is a translator and art history researcher based in New York City. She was born and raised in Ukraine but calls NYC her home since 2003. Her poetry translations from Ukrainian, essays, and book reviews appeared in National Translation Month, Versopolis, Ukrainian Weekly, Asymptote, Bracken, and Arrowsmith Press. She co-edited a bilingual volume of the early poetry of Mykola Bazhan, an important and prolific 20th century Ukrainian poet (Academic Studies Press, 2020), translated V. Domotovych’s novel On Shaky Ground (Central University Press, 2024), and co-translated Artem Chekh’s novel Rock, Paper, Grenade (Seven Stories Press, 2025).