Novels •
Chevengur – 1928 (1972) •
The Foundation Pit – 1930 (1969) • '''' (unfinished) – 1933–1936 (1991)
Short fiction • "The Motherland of Electricity" – 1926 • "The Lunar Bomb" – 1926 •
The Sluices of Epifany (novella) – 1927 • "Meadow Craftsmen" – 1928 • "The Innermost Man" – 1928 • "Che-Che-O" (Central Chernozem Oblast) - 1928, written together with
Boris Pilnyak • "The City of Gradov" - 1929 • "Makar the Doubtful" – 1929 •
For Future Use (novella) – 1930 (1931) •
The Sea of Youth (novella) – 1934 (1986) •
Soul, or '''' (novella) – 1934 (1966) • "The Third Son" – 1936 • "Fro" (short story) – 1936 • "Among Animals and Plants" (short story) – 1936 • "The Fierce and Beautiful World" – 1937 •
The River Potudan (collection of short stories) – 1937 • "Immortality" – 1936, 1939 • "The Cow" – 1938 (1965) • "Aphrodite" – 1945 • "The Return" or "Homecoming"– 1946
Other •
Blue Depths (verse) – 1922 •
The Barrel Organ (play) – 1930 •
The Hurdy Gurdy (play) – 1930 (1988) •
Fourteen Little Red Huts (play) – 1931 (1988) •
Father-Mother (screenplay) – 1936 (1967)
English translations The short story collection
The Fierce and Beautiful World, which includes his most famous story, "The Potudan River" (1937), was published in 1970 with an introduction by
Yevgeny Yevtushenko and became Platonov's first book published in English translation. During 1970s,
Ardis published translations of his major works, such as
The Foundation Pit and
Chevengur. In 2000, the
New York Review Books Classics series republished
The Fierce and Beautiful World with an introduction by Tatyana Tolstaya. In 2007, New York Review Books published a collection of newer translations of some of these stories, including the novella
Soul (1934), "The Return" (1946) and "The River Potudan". This was followed by a new translation of
The Foundation Pit in 2009, in 2012 by
Happy Moscow, an unfinished novel (not published in Platonov's lifetime), and in 2023 a new translation of
Chevengur. •
The Fierce and Beautiful World: Stories by Andrei Platonov, introduction by
Yevgeny Yevtushenko,
E. P. Dutton, 1970 (tr.
Joseph Barnes) •
The Foundation Pit, a bi-langued edition with preface by
Joseph Brodsky,
Ardis Publishing, 1973 (tr.
Mirra Ginsburg) •
Chevengur, Ardis Publishing, 1978 (tr. Anthony Olcott) •
Collected Works, Ardis Publishing, 1978 (tr.
Thomas P. Whitney, Carl R. Proffer, Alexey A. Kiselev, Marion Jordan and Friederike Snyder) •
Fierce, Fine World,
Raduga Publishers, 1983 (tr. Laura Beraha and Kathleen Cook) •
The River Potudan,
Bristol Classical Press, 1998 (tr. Marilyn Minto) •
The Foundation Pit,
Harvill Press, 1996 (tr.
Robert Chandler and Geoffrey Smith) •
The Return and Other Stories, Harvill Press, 1999 (tr. Robert Chandler and Angela Livingstone) •
The Portable Platonov, New Russian Writing, 1999 (tr. Robert Chandler) •
Happy Moscow, introduction by Eric Naiman, Harvill Press, 2001 (tr. Robert Chandler and Elizabeth Chandler) •
Happy Moscow, introduction by Robert Chandler, New York Review Books, 2012 (tr. Robert Chandler and Elizabeth Chandler) •
Happy Moscow, introduction by Robert Chandler, Vintage Classics, 2013 (tr. Robert Chandler and Elizabeth Chandler) •
Soul, Harvill Press, 2003 (tr. Robert Chandler and Elizabeth Chandler) •
Russian Short Stories from Pushkin to Buida, Penguin Classics, 2005, (tr. Robert Chandler and others). Includes two important stories by Platonov: "The Third Son" and "The Return" •
Soul and Other Stories,
New York Review Books, 2007 (tr. Robert Chandler with Katia Grigoruk, Angela Livingstone, Olga Meerson, and Eric Naiman). •
The Foundation Pit, New York Review Books 2009 (tr. Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler and Olga Meerson). •
Russian Magic Tales from Pushkin to Platonov, Penguin Classics, 2012 (tr. Robert Chandler and others). Includes Platonov's subtle adaptations of traditional Russian folk tales. •
Fourteen Little Red Huts and Other Plays, Columbia University Press, 2016 (The Russian Library) (ed. by Robert Chandler; tr. by Robert Chandler, Jesse Irwin, and Susan Larsen; with notes by Robert Chandler and Natalya Duzhina) •
Chevengur, trans. Elizabeth Chandler and Robert Chandler (New York Review Books, 2023) ==References==