Nikolai Leskov was born in 1831, in Gorokhovo, Orel province, Russia.
His parents belonged to Russian gentry and owned an estate with serfs.
He was a Gymnasium student until the age of 15. In 1846 his father died
and a disastrous fire destroyed the family estate and ruined him
financially. Leskov served as a court clerk in Orel and in Kiev. In
1853 he married Olga Smirnova; they had two children and separated in
1860. His job at an English firm made him travel to remote regions of
Russia, where he also collected the material for his writings.
Leskov absorbed the knowledge of the folk traditions and legends from
his childhood. His exposure to vernacular speech of peasants has marked
his highly original literary style. His writing career began in St.
Petersburg, where he settled in 1861. Leskov published short stories
with moderate liberal messages. His travels in Europe strengthened his
opposition to the conservatives in Russia. His first novel "Nowhere"
(Nekuda, 1864) was written in Prague. Leskov was critical of the
Russian Orthodox Church for its rigid conservatism and it's corrupt
clerics. His views caused him a loss of many publishing contracts, but
Leskov was consistent in his independent position. He joined
Lev Tolstoy in
a call for separation of Church and State. That caused his dismissal
after 10 years of exemplary work for the Imperial Department of
Education. At that time he lived in a civil union with Katherina
Bubnova. They had a son, Andrei Leskov, who became his biographer, and
the keeper of the writer's archive.
Leskov was a master of colloquial Russian. He investigated the dark and
mysterious sides of passion in "Lady Makbeth of Mtsensk" (1865). He
explored religious piety of an Orthodox monk in "Enchanted Wanderer"
(Zacharovanny Strannik, 1873). Leskov made literary portraits of the
corrupt and drunk clerics of the Orthodox Church, weird
revolutionaries, and terrible social conditions in Russia. His
truthfulness triggered attacks on the writer from all parties, and he
almost became a literary outcast. His masterpiece "Lefty" (The Tale of
Cross-eyed Lefty from Tula and the Steel Flea, 1881) was highly
regarded by
Maxim Gorky and
Anton Chekhov, who considered Leskov his teacher.
Conservative Russian press labeled Leskov a heretic for his
vegetarianism, "organic life philosophy" and "love of the world". He
was the disciple of
Lev Tolstoy. Leskov died of a rare form of breast
cancer that affects men. He was buried at the Volkovo Cemetery in St.
Petersburg, Russia.