One of my dreams has come true – I once dreamed of designing beautiful dresses and creating haute couture designs. And now, my book “The Age of Rain” (translated into …
Category: White Phoenix Tales Club
The artist Nathalie Kho shared some insights and secrets on her work on the illustrations for the book The Devil of Père Lachaise by Olga de Benoist
Diary notes of a trip of writers from the Paris-based literary club The White Phoenix to the SlovoNovo 2021 forum, held in Budva (Montenegro) from 24 to 30 September 2021. …
This interview gives us insights on the GSR, a revolutionary technique of self-development created by a Russian researcher Dimitry Ustinov
The interview was conducted and recorded on 16 February 2020 by the Parisian artist Nathalie Kho. My first impression of you is fire, flame and flight. And how would you …
I am so excited to annonce that my book O Choro da Chuva (in Russian "Время дождя") which was translated to Portuguese and published in Brazil in 2019, will be presented by the Brazilian publishing house Pergunta Fixar at the famous festival SXSW in Austin, Texas-USA.
The book "O Choro da Chuva" has been published in Portuguese in the Brazilian publishing house Pergunta Fixar. Listen to the music of the city, and get acquainted with its mythical characters such as Rain man, Catcher of Music, A Magic Bird, a Dancing Girl, Europe & Asia, modern Tessey and Ariadna. Love and death, a star road, metro mazes, dreams and reality, the shining darkness of night, eroticism and innocence, wealth and poverty, tears and happiness, Christmas and spring - and all this with a light haze of rain.
Interview for the portal “All Switzerland In The Palm Of Your Hand” (Geneva) Just as the Geneva Motor Show serves as a “guide” for car enthusiasts from all over the …
Olga de Benoist set herself a task to portray "careless and shining Paris", the Paris, seen through the eyes of young hippies and hipsters, the darlings of fortune. Her characters love life, they know how to enjoy it and still they are obsessed with an existential pathos. Every now and then they say, "Who are we? Why do we live?" (Konstantin Grishine's literary review of the book The Age of Rain)