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DavidAvetisov
David Avetisov—heavily inspired by the traditional founding fathers of Russian literature, and a muse—found inspiration in their works and attained a way to channel himself through writing. After reading Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin's “Eugene Onegin”(a novel in verse) and Mikhail Yuryevich Lermontov's “Demon,” David found admiration for their works, as well as their style of writing, known as iambic tetrameter, a meter in poetry in which each line consists of four iambic feet, or iambs. Completing the scheme, each line rhymes in either varied or an unvaried rhyme scheme, depending on the work. For his style of writing, David chose a varied scheme, and began “In Oblivion” in early 2009, completing it in July, 2013. At first he wrote the main gist of the novel, leaving a lot of empty spaces for words he knew would fill in the missing links within the iambic tetrameter scheme—focusing on the story as the priority. Later he went back to complete the aesthetic part of the process, to tie the whole plot together.