Victor Kamkin Bookstore
The Victor Kamkin Bookstore was a retail book shop with a main location in Rockville, Maryland and a smaller store in New York City in the United States. Established in 1953 by Victor Kamkin and his wife Elena Kamkina, the store maintained continuous operation throughout the Cold War era, specializing in material published in the Soviet Union.
Company history
Establishment
The Victor Kamkin Bookstore was founded in 1953 by Viktor Petrovich Kamkin, a St. Petersburg-born son of an ethnic Russian financier, and his wife, Elena Andreevna Kamkina.As a young man Victor Kamkin was a volunteer in the White Army headed by Admiral Alexander Kolchak in the Russian Civil War and was forced into emigration to Harbin, China in 1923 with the remnants of Kolchak's defeated forces. In Harbin Kamkin resumed his education, graduating from a Russian law school in 1928.
Kamkin moved to Shanghai in 1929 where he entered the book publishing business as a partner in the firm V.P. Kamkin and A.P. Malyk, eventually publishing some 26 titles. In May 1937 Kamkin relocated to the northern Chinese city of Tianjin, where he established a Russian-language bookstore called "Znanie". During the years of World War II Kamkin, still in Tianjin, worked as an assistant manager in an Italian-American publishing firm called "Chili Press."
Kamkin's publishing experience in China led him to work as a translator and technical assistant on the staff of the American military newspaper North China Marine, which was published in Tianjin. He moved with this publication to the eastern Chinese city of Qingdao in 1948 before successfully emigrating to the United States in 1952, settling in the Washington, DC metropolitan area.
In America, Kamkin returned to the world of book publishing and sales, first opening his bookstore specializing in Russian-language publications in 1953. In a field largely devoid of competition, Kamkin managed to gain a lucrative exclusivity agreement with the Soviet government for the importation of books and periodicals from the USSR. The Victor Kamkin Bookstore was thus established as the primary source in the United States for Russian literature and political and economic titles of interest to scholars of Russian history and the contemporary Soviet Union.