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      Quote of the month:
"The Party does not need me to lie. The Party needs me to be honest, to work honestly, to have a family life based on love."
      From Alone by Samuil Aleshin.      

Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of The Thaw in Soviet Literature [1954-1957]

DETAILED SUMMARIES

thawbut Guests by Leonid Zorin (1954). Intergenerational conflict centered around an honest Old Bolshevik and his adult son, who has become an arrogant, bureaucrat eisenstein corrupt, materialistic bigwig, interested only in his position and comfort. The bigwig engages in an arbitrary injustice and plots to ruin the career of an innocent man. The Old Bolshevik uncovers the plot and banishes his son. Even the bigwig's own son--a representative of the younger generation--promises to wage tireless war on his father and all like him. Published in Feb 1954, it is one of the first Thaw-era work.(more)

thawbut The Thaw by Ehrenburg, Ilya (1954). The novel which gave its name to an entire era of Soviet history, consisting mainly of interior monologues of a wide range of characters who are living inner personal lives at odds with their outer, public lives. Others struggle to keep love out of their souls because it conflicts with their duties to the factory and to the Party. A talented artist squanders his talent for the sake of glory and material success. But as winter passes and the spring thaw comes, a change is beginning--loves and childlike exuberances are blossoming out into the open. (more)

thawbut Not By Bread Alone by Dudintsev, Vladimir (1956). An inventor struggles against the invisible empire of bureaucracy and self-servers in a courageous attempt to advance the Soviet pipe industry. (more)
----

Immortality by Bubennov, Mikhail (1940). The Whites operate a "death barge", full of prisoners--Bolsheviks and ordinary peasants--who are hauled out one by one to be shot or hung. The captives attempt a rebellion, partisans attempt a rescue, and everyone nearly drowns in a storm. After capturing Kazan, the Red Army finally shows up to liberate the barge.(more)

Locusts by Budantsev, Sergei (1927). A remote area of southern Azerbaijan is threatened with an attack of ravenous locusts. Swindlers and saboteurs--both in and out of official positions--defraud the government, leaving the region without resources or equipment with which to battle the locusts. Natural disaster ensues, followed by arrests and trials. (more)

White Guard by Bulgakov, Mikhail (1924). A family of White Guardists and their friends are forced to accept defeat as their side loses to Petlyura's Ukrainian nationalists in Kiev in December 1918. (more)

The Rout by Fadeev, Aleksandr (1927). Red Army partisans flee from Cossacks and Japanese interventionists in Russia's Far East. (more)

Cities and Years by Fedin, Konstantin (1924). A spineless Russian intellectual is interred in Germany at the start of World War I. After the war, he fails to find his place in Revolutionary society. He betrays his love and helps a counterrevolutionary escape Soviet justice.... (more)

Chapaev by Furmanov, Dmitri (1923). The charismatic Red Army commander Chapaev, along with his faithful political commisar, Klichkov, fights a never-ending battle against Kolchak, Cossacks, and other enemies of Communism. But in the end, he gets caught with his pants down. .... (more)

Cement by Gladkov, Fyodor (1924). True Communists fight White Guards, bandits, lust and corruption as they struggle to bring a cement factory and the Soviet economy back to life in post-Civil War days. .... (more)

Fat-Faced Passions by Gorky, Maksim (1917). A kvas-seller meets an abused young woman and her 12-year-old crippled son, who have been driven into grinding poverty. Despite the hopelessness of their situation and the alcoholism of his mother, the boy--who keeps a menagarie of cockroaches and other bugs--holds onto his dreams of a brighter future.... (more)

Son of the Regiment by Kataev, Valentin P. (1946). An orphan boy is picked up by a Soviet front-line artillery unit. He becomes one of them, going on a secret mission behind German lines and taking part in a fierce and bloody battle. Stalin Prize winner, 1946.. (more)

The Tanker Derbent by Krymov, Yuri S. (1938). The undisciplined and uncaring crew of an oil tanker gets swept up in the excitement of the Stakhanovite movement and completely transform themselves. A daring rescue on the high seas is featured, and the sanctity of marriage is upheld.... (more)

The Forty-First by Lavrenyov, Boris (1924). A female sniper with Red partisans misses her 41st vicitim (a White officer), then winds up stranded with him on a desert island, where they fall in love. However, the White's essentially selfish, bourgeois nature becomes apparent and she shoots him, fulfilling her mission and her class destiny .... (more)

The Week by Libedinsky, Yuri (1922). A peasant revolt rips through a remote town in the Urals. It is eventually put down, but not before the leading local Communists are brutally murdered. Frank portrayal of the hostility of the peasants to Soviet power and of many of the Party's failings .... (more)

Siberia by Markov, Georgi (1973). A sweeping epic of love, revolution, and nature set in snow-swept Siberia. Bolsheviks, kulaks, Social Revolutionaries, honest hard-working peasants, and giant fish-creatures of legend all clash as tsarism crumbles. .... (more)

The Bedbug by Mayakovsky, Vladimir (1929). A philistine from the NEP era gets frozen and is revived fifty years later in 1979. The moderns at first mistake him for an honest worker, but then correctly identify him as a bourgeoisus vulgaris, a blood-sucking insect similar to, but more dangerous than, the bedbug. He is put on display in a cage equipped with special filters to trap all the dirty words. .... (more)

I Want To Go Home by Mikhalkov, Sergei (1948). In post-war Germany, the evil, murdering British keep displaced Soviet children captive, planning to turn them into wage slaves and spies. Honest Germans, driven into poverty and despair by the bullying, land-grabbing, greedy Americans, flee to freedom in the Soviet sector. .... (more)

Marya the Bolshevik by Neverov, Aleksandr (1926). Women's liberation comes to a post-revolutionary Russian village. .... (more)

Envy by Olesha, Yuri (1927). A successful Soviet food industry wizard gives shelter to an aimless drifter. The drifter comes to envy his host and, with the aid of his host's brother, plots a "conspiracy of feelings" against the new era. The plotters plan on using an "Ophelia machine" to annihilate their enemies. (more)

Three Fat Men by Olesha, Yuri (1924). A fantastic fairy tale of revolution. A tightrope walker, balloons, very large pastries and a brave little girl help topple the dictatorship of three very fat men. (more)

Snow by Paustovsky, Konstantin . New acquaintances, snow, and memories--real and imagined. (more)

Happiness by Pavlenko, Pyotr (1947). A war veteran comes to the devastated Crimea, hoping for a quiet and peaceful life. Instead, he finds happiness working to rebuild the smashed economy. He also plays a part in the Yalta Conference. Churchill is a fat, drunken pig. U.S. Army officers are more interested in selling soap than in defeating the enemy. Stalin Prize winner, 1947. (more)

The Volga Falls To The Caspian Sea by Pilnyak, Boris (1931). Sabotage and betrayal on the construction site as true communists struggle to alter nature and establish a new morality. (more)

Callow Youth by Rekemchuk, Aleksandr (1962). In Siberia, a young worker named Nikolai is dispatched to a nearby town to demand bricks for his construction team. He quickly succeeds and also helps convert the brick factory to new technology. A friend narrowly avoids involvement in a shady money-making scheme; Nikolai gets a kiss; repressed Old Bolsheviks live happily ever after; and, inspired by Yuri Gagarin, practically everyone volunteers to go to the moon. (more)

Iron Flood by Serafimovich, Aleksandr (1924). A squabbling, undisciplined, and disorganized rabble of Red fighters and refugees attempt to flee from some pursing Cossacks and join up with the main Red Army units. They escape annihilation only by finally uniting and submitting to the iron will of their newly elected commander, who promises death as punishment for the slightest insubordination. (more)

Two Deaths by Serafimovich, Aleksandr (1926). Street fighting rages on in Moscow. A young woman volunteers to spy on the Whites and has to pay the ultimate price. (more)

Mess Mend, or a Yankee in Petrograd by Shaginyan, Marietta (1923 - 1924). Amusing spy thriller, comedy, and science fiction novel all rolled into one. Western capitalists and members of the deposed nobility plot to assassinate Lenin and the entire Soviet government. But they are foiled by a secret American workers organization, the Soviet government, and nature itself, which afflicts the deposed princes, capitalists, etc., with a bizarre degenerative disease, literally turning them into beasts.(more)

Snowball Berry Red by Shukshin, Vasily (1973). An ex-con moves to the countryside, hoping to start a new life. He gets side-tracked with a bit of debauchery, but eventually settles down as a tractor driver. Unfortunately, his old gang, unhappy about being abandoned, catch up with him for a final, fatal confrontation. (more)

Days and Nights by Simonov, Konstantin (1944). A batallion commander and his troops defend three apartment buildings (or rather the rubble of three buildings) for seventy days during the Battle of Stalingrad. They suffer incredible casualties, demonstrate incredible bravery, and get lots of medals. And during it all, the hero even finds time to fall in love, get married, and have a bachelor party. (more)

Chocolate by Tarasov-Rodionov, Aleksandr (1922). A local Cheka chief is falsely accused of bribery and corruption. Revolutionary justice demands that he be shot, despite his innocence. (more)

Azure Cities by Tolstoy, Aleksei N. (1925). Utopian socialism clashes with everyday reality, leading to murder. "A passionate tale of a tormenting, impatient, and feverish imagination." (more)

House on the Embankment by Trifonov, Yuri (1976). Revolves around life in a famous Moscow apartment house which served as the home of many of the Soviet elite.... (more)

Sisters by Veresaev, Vikenty (1933). One of two Komsomol sisters is ruthless in rooting out kulaks and forcing peasants into the kolkhozes. The other sister defies Party orders and works instead for "voluntary" collectivization. She is about to be purged but is saved when Stalin publishes his "Giddy From Success" article denouncing the excesses of forced collectivization. (more)

The Life and Amazing Adventures of the Soldier Ivan Chonkin by Voinovich, Vladimir. At the beginning of World War II, a not-too-bright Red Army soldier, abandoned and forgotten by his superiors, bravely defends a Soviet airplane, gets a girlfriend, arrests the entire local apparatus of the secret police, and beats back the attack of an entire regiment...all by accident. (more)

From the Point of View of Eternity by Zagrebelny, Pavlo (1971). Given the task of creating special pipes for a secret project, a young Ukrainian worker and his team battle a stagnation-bent careerist and defy official orders to develop a fundamentally new pipe-rolling technique. The breakthrough comes following a literal and figurative marriage of brains and brawn. (more)

Science Fiction:
The Struggle in Space by Beliayev, Aleksandr (1928). Rocket-airships, radio-controlled tanks, and Death Rays. Evil Americans try to destroy the socialist paradise of the future, but the Soviets counterattack and win. Remnant capitalists flee to an underground base near Antartica, planning to escape into outer space. Socialism on one planet! (more)

Abduction Of The Sorcerer by Bulychev, Kir (1981). Time travelers from the future stop off in the present on their way to the past to kidnap a 13th-century sorcerer. (more)

notractors
The essay that started The Thaw
"On Sincerity in Literature"
by Vladimir Pomerantsev
(1953)

Appearing in the December 1953 issue of the journal Novy Mir, this essay attacked insincerity and the varnishing of reality in socialist realism. It provoked a firestorm of controversy and marked the beginning of The Thaw in Soviet literature. "Just say NO to tractors!"
MINI SUMMARIES
1,000+ Mini-Summaries
By Author       By Year

Today's Title
Crystal Vase by Viktor Telgupov (1972). Foreign capitalists offer to pay the young Soviet Republic five powerful new locomotives for a crystal vase of exquisite craftsmanship. The offer is tempting, but Lenin says the vase is so beautiful it can't be sold at any price.

Abramov, Fyodor
Aksenov, Vasily
Alekseev, G.
Alekseev, G.
Aleshin, Samuil
Alieva, Fazu
Antonov, S.
Argunova, Nora
Arosev, A.
Astafev, Viktor
Avaliani, Lado
Azhaev, Vasili
Babel, Isaak E.
Baklanov, Grigori
Bakunts, Aksel
Bednii, Boris
Bek, Aleksandr
Beliaev, Sergei
Beliayev, Aleksandr R.
Belov, Vasili I.
Berestov, Valentin
Bieliauskas, A.
Bitov, Andrei
Boldyrev, S.
Bondarev, Yuri V.
Bryl, Yanka
Bubennov, Mikhail S.
Budantsev, Sergei F.
Bulgakov, Mikhail A.
Bulychev, Kir
Bykov, Vasili V.
Chapygin, Aleksei P.
Chernyonok, Mikhail Ya.
Davydov, Yuri
Dombrovsky, Yuri
Dorosh, Efim
Drabkina, Elizaveta
Drozdov, A
Dudintsev, Vladimir
Dumbadze, Nodar
Ehrenburg, Ilya G.
Ekimov, Boris
Esin, Sergei
Evdokimov, I.
Fadeev, Aleksandr A.
Fedin, Konstantin
Fedoseev, Grigori
Fomenko, Vladimir
Forsh, Olga D.
Furmanov, Dmitri
Gaidar, Arkady
Galshoyan, Mushegh
Ganina, Maya
Gelman, Aleksandr
Genatulin, Anatoli
German, Yuri P.
Gladilin, Anatoli
Gladkov, Fyodor V.
Glebov, Anatoly
Godenko, Mikhail
Golovin, Genadii
Gontar, Avram
Gorbatov, Boris L.
Gorky, Maksim
Granin, Daniil
Grekova, I.
Grin, Aleksandr
Guk, Gennady
Gurevich, Georgi
Gussein, Mekhti
Ilf, Ilya & Petrov, Evgeny
Ilin, Yakov
Ilus, V.
Iskander, Fazil
Ivanov, Vadim
Ivanov, Vsevolod
Karavaeva, Anna A.
Kataev, Ivan Ivanovich
Kataev, Valentin P.
Katerli, Nina
Kaverin, Veniamin A.
Kazakevich, E.
Kazakov, Yuri P.
Kazantsev, Aleksandr
Kekketyn, Ketsai
Keshishian, G.
Ketlinskaya, Vera
Khalafian, Z.
Khalov, Pavel
Khansadian, S.
Kharms, Daniil
Khodzher, Grigori
Kim, Anatolii
Kimonko, Djansi
Kireev, Ruslan
Knorre, Fyodor
Kochar, R.
Kochetov, Vsevolod
Koltsov, Mikhail
Kondratev, Vyacheslav
Konetsky, Viktor
Kononov, Aleksandr
Koptelov, Afanasi
Korneyuchuk, Aleksandr
Kozakov, Mikhail E.
Krasnobryzhy, Ivan
Krupin, Vladimir
Krymov, Yuri S.
Kungurov, Gavriil
Kuraev, Mikhail
Kurchatkin, Anatolii
Kuusberg, P.
Kuznetsova, Agnia
Latynin, Leonid
Lavrenyov, Boris A.
Lavrov, Ilya
Leonov, Leonid M.
Libedinsky, Yuri N.
Lidin, Vladimir
Lipatov, Vil
Loginov-Lesnyak, P. S.
Lyashko, N.N.
Makanin, Vladimir
Makayonok, Andrei
Maksimov, Vladimir
Malyshkin, Aleksandr G.
Marcinkevicius, J.
Markov, Georgi M.
Matevossian, H.
Mayakovsky, Vladimir V.
Melezh, Ivan
Merilaas, K.
Mikhalkov, Sergei
Mozhaev, Boris
Muguev, Khadzhi-Murat
Mustafin, Yamil
Nagibin, Yuri M.
Nagishkin, Dmitri
Nekrasov, Viktor
Neverov, Aleksandr
Nikandrov, N.
Nikiforov, Georgi
Nikitin, B.
Nikitin, Nikolai
Nikolaeva, Galina
Nikulin, Lev V.
Nizovoi, Pavel
Nurpeisov, A.
Ognyov, Nikolai
Okudzhava, Bulat
Olesha, Yuri K.
Orlov, Vladimir
Ostrovsky, Nikolai
Ovechkin, Valentin
Panfyorov, Fyodor V.
Panova, Vera F.
Paperny, Zinoviy
Paustovsky, Konstantin G.
Pavlenko, Pyotr A.
Permitin, Efim
Petrossian, V.
Pikul, Valentin S.
Pilnyak, Boris
Platonov, Andrei
Podlyashuk, P.
Pogodin, Nikolai
Pogodin, Radii
Pomerantsev, Vladimir.
Popov, Valerii
Prishvin, Mikhail
Pristavkin, Anatoli
Promet, L.
Proskurin, Pyotr
Prozorovsky, Lev V.
Rasputin, Valentin G.
Rekemchuk, Aleksandr E.
Rimkevicius, V.
Rogal, Nikolai
Romanov, Panteleimon S.
Romashov, B.
Roshchin, Mikhail
Rozov, Viktor
Rudnev, Oleg A.
Samadoglu, Yusif
Sartakov, Sergei
Savchenko, Vladimir
Savich, Ovady
Seifullina, Lidia N.
Selvinsky, Ilya
Semushkin, Tikhon Z.
Semyonov, Georgi
Semyonov, Julian
Semyonov, Sergei A.
Serafimovich, Aleksandr
Shaginyan, Marietta S.
Shatrov, Mikhail
Shestalov, Yuvan
Shimkevich, M.
Shishkov, Vyacheslav Ya.
Shklovsky, Viktor B.
Shmelyov, Nikolai
Sholokhov, Mikhail
Shpanov, Nikolai
Shtein, Aleksandr
Shudnik, Nikolai
Shukshin, Vasily
Simonov, Konstantin M.
Sirge, R.
Sletov, P.
Sluckis, M.
Smirnov, A.
Smirnov, E.
Smuul, J.
Snegov, Sergei
Sobolev, Leonid
Soloukhin, Vladimir
Stein, Aleksandr
Stelmakh, Mikhailo
Stonov, Dmitri
Strugatsky, Arakdy & Boris
Surov, Anatoli
Sverchkov, D.
Tamarin, V.
Tarasov-Rodionov, Aleksandr I.
Taurin, Franz
Telgupov, Viktor
Tendryakov, Vladimir
Tkachenko, Antoli
Tokareva, Viktoriya
Tolstaya, Tanya
Tolstoy, Alexei N.
Toomaspoeg, A.
Totovents, V.
Trenyov, K.
Trifonov, Yuri
Troepolsky, Gavriil
Troyat, A.
Truu, S.
Tvardovsky, Aleksandr T.
Tynyanov, Yuri N.
Vampilov, Aleksandr
Veresaev, Vikenty V.
Vesely, Artem
Vigdorova, Frida A.
Virta, Nikolai E.
Voinovich, Vladimir
Volodin, Aleksandr
Yampolsky, Boris
Yashin, Aleksandr Ya.
Zadornov, Nikolai P.
Zalygin, Sergei P.
Zamyatin, Evgeny I.
Zavadovsky, Leonid
Zhdanov, Nikolai
Zhigulin, Anatoli
Zhitkov, Boris
Zorian, S.
Zorin, Leonid
Zoshchenko, Mikhail

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the THIN JOURNAL
Features       Texts      Depts.
Encyclopedia of Soviet Writers
Links      Comrade of the Month

Untitled
"Levers" by A. Yashin (1956).
The blockbuster story that shocked a nation, lambasting Party officials as duplicitous, bureaucratic, and pedantic, treating people as mere levers to be manipulated, not as human beings. (Complete text in English).
Two Soviet Winter Tales
snegurochka
For the Soviets, fairy tales weren't just kid stuff. Some of the most prominent Soviet authors worked in the genre. SovLit.com presents translations of two tales with a winter theme:

"Steel Ring" by Konstantin Paustovsky
"Snow House" by Aleksei N. Tolstoy
Features:
Library of Siberian Novels
Review of a 20-volume collection of Soviet Siberian novels. "Before the Revolution, it was mainly Central Russia that was reflected in Russian literature....Siberia remained virtually outside the old literature's field of vision. The new Soviet literature began by firmly wiping out "frontier posts" in literary geography." (1971)

Mayakovsky and Nekrasov by Kornei Chukovsky
Analysis of the thematic and stylistic similarities of the two poets. (1952)

Konstantin Fedin Comments on Ilya Ehrenburg
"...His genre is words that act...."

From the Notebooks of Andrei Platonov
Material which Platonov himself wanted suppresssed, liberated in 1973 by his widow and offered up for the world to read.

Mikhail Bulgakov Remembers Gudok
Excerpt from an unfinished manuscript by Bulgakov in which he recalls his work at the newspaper Gudok. He calls the work there "odious" and "a nightmare"; the sketches he wrote for the paper he describes as full of "stereotypes" and "coarseness".

I Remember Mayakovsky.
Lydia Seifullina recalls her first sighting of Mayakovsky.

Konstantin Fedin on the State of Soviet Literature, 1957
Short excerpt from an interview in which Fedin comments on the "invigoration"
of Soviet literature and its renewed willingness to present the conflicts and ugliness of life.

Young Soviet Writers About Themselves (1962)
Vasili AKSYONOV, Vasili BYKOV, Andrei VOZNESENSKY, Ivan DRATCH, Yevgeni YEVTUSHENKO, Yuri KAZAKOV, Justinas MARCINKEVICIUS, and Anatoli PRISTAVKIN respond to a questionnaire circulated in 1962 by the journal Voprosi Literaturi (Problems of Literature).

TRUE Propaganda
Soviet Literature Quiz Game
Q. In Zoshchenko's "Bathhouse", what should you remember if you drop your soap?
(Click here to play)


Texts:
My First and Most Beloved Friend by Nagibin, Yuri. Two boys develop a deep and lasting relationship which carries them through the usual boyhood and adolescent experiences, adventures, and the search for identity. They are separated only by war, when one of them dies. Years later, an accidental visit by the surviving friend to the battlefield where the other died brings back memories as well as feelings of guilt for not also dying. (Complete Text in English)

Mad Boy by Dudintsev, Vladimir (1958). A cruel boy taunts a friendly dog and gets bitten. The boy's intellectual, Volga-owning father complains to authorities, but the neighbors defend the dog. The boy gets his comeuppance in the form of painful rabies shots. (Beshenii Mal'chishka) (Complete Text in Russian)

Cherry Seed by Olesha, Yuri (1929). A dreamer, who spends most of his time in the invisible world of his imagination, plants a cherry tree in honor of his unrequited love, without first asking the permission of the Five Year Plan. (Complete text in English)

I Want To Live by Shukshin, Vasily (1966) An escaped convict tries to make it out of the Siberian taiga in winter. Luckily for him, he comes across an old hunter, who shares his remote cabin and his wisdom. The convict repays this kindness with brutality. (Complete text in English)

A Midsummer Day's Game by Soloukhin, Vladimir. A grandfather teaches his granddaughter a game from his youth. The girl enjoys the game, then updates it to modern conditions and modern technology. (Complete text in English)

A Political Battle by Veresaev, Vikenty (1933). In an excerpt from the novel Sisiters, two teams of factory workers engage in a type of "Trivial Pursuit" to see who knows the most about the Five Year Plan. They answer burning questions such as: "What is the fundamental idea of the Five Year Plan?" and "What will happen to the kulaks when the collective farms have taken over the whole agricultural domain?" (Complete text in English)

The Lion by Zamyatin, Evgeny (1935). The great king of the jungle, the lion, is dead drunk. In order to win the love of Leningrad's first policewoman, a fire fighter from Ryazan offers to take the lion's place. (Complete text in English)

Death of Dolgushov by Babel, Isaac (1924). Cowardly, bespectacled intellectual (just like Babel) refuses to put a fatally wounded Red Army soldier out of his misery, preferring to keep his hands clean no matter the cost. (Complete text in English)

Flying Carpet by Beliyaev, Aleksandr A scientist is convinced that fleas are superior to humans--at least in terms of leaping ability. He sets out to right this injustice of nature and nearly ends up stranded in the stratosphere. Science-fiction comedy. (Complete Text in English)

Interplanetary Chess Congress by Ilf, Ilya & Petrov, Evgeny In an excerpt from "The 12 Chairs", con man Ostap Bender transforms a backwaters Volga River town into the chess capital of the universe. (Complete text in English)

Pushkin and Gogol by Kharms, Daniil Pushkin and Gogol are falling all over each other. A short play. (Complete text in English)

Ivan Ivanych Samovar by Kharms, Daniil. A friendly samovar dispenses tea. Late risers, however, are in for a surprise. (Complete text in English)

Tale of the Military Secret by Gaidar, Arkady (1935). The peaceful Soviet motherland is subjected to a perfidious sneak attack by bourgeois forces. As the Soviet fathers and older brothers are killed, little children have to join the battle. One such child is the Malchik-Kilbachish. He is captured and tortured, but remains true to his word and does not reveal the great military secret of what makes the motherland and the workers of the world so strong. His bravery gives the Red Army the time it needs to ride to the rescue. (Complete text in both English and Russian)

Blood Knot by Dumbadze, Nodar (c. 1984) An old man and an old woman battle each other to win the custody of their less-than-perfect grandson. (Georgian) (Complete text in English)


Departments:
Encyclopedia of Soviet Authors.
Short biographies of 60+ Soviet authors.

SovLinks
Links to over 500 web sites related to topics of Soviet Literature.

Quote of the Month:

The Party does not need me to lie. The Party needs me to be honest, to work honestly, to have a family life based on love.

From "Alone" by Samuil Aleshin

Comrade of the Month:

spacedogs
Soviet Space Dogs

Sure, you're heard of Laika, the first dog in space. But what about Bobik, Snezhinka, Lisichka, Belka and Strelka? These are just a few of the the Soviet Hero-Dogs who literally rocketed the Soviet Union into the space-race lead in the 1950s and early 1960s. Many bravely gave their lives in this great struggle. Others survived to a ripe old age, producing many offspring. One such space pup--Pushkina--was presented as a gift to U.S. President John Kennedy. Despite suspicions that Pushkina was equipped with a microphone, the U.S. President graciously allowed her to live and even mate with the family dog. To learn more about these Communistic Canine, visit Melissa Snowden's site on Space Dogs!
---
Previous Comrades of the Month:
SovAvto - Soviet Automobiles
E-Library of A. Belousenko
Nashe Kino (Our Cinema)
Comrade Kosmonaut
Museum of Soviet Calculators.
Songs From the Soviet Past.

Detective & Spy Fiction:
Losing Bet by Chernyonok, Mikhail (1979). In Novosibirsk, militia detective Anton Biriukov unravels a web of fraud, illegal book speculation, icon forgery and murder. (more)

Hunting For The Past by Prozorovsky, Lev (1985). Chasing a CIA spy with links to the Nazi past through Latvia and Estonia. (more)

Seventeen Moments of Spring by Semyonov, Julian. Soviet super-spy Stirlitz, working undercover in the Nazi SS, defeats an attempt by the U.S. and Britain to conclude a separate peace with Nazi Germany and open a joint front against the Soviet Union (more)

Mess Mend, or a Yankee in Petrograd by Shaginyan, Marietta (1923 - 1924). Amusing spy thriller, comedy, and science fiction novel all rolled into one. Western capitalists and members of the deposed nobility plot to assassinate Lenin and the entire Soviet government. But they are foiled by a secret American workers organization, the Soviet government, and nature itself, which afflicts the deposed princes, capitalists, etc., with a bizarre degenerative disease, literally turning them into beasts.(more)

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