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Author of “Generations of Winter” remembered

Published: 07 July, 2009, 10:38

TAGS: Art, Russia


The farewell ceremony for one of Russia’s most important writers of the 20th century, Vasily Aksenov, will be held on July 9, three days after the death of the 76-year-old writer.

Aksenov died at a hospital where he was receiving treatment after last year’s stroke. In 2008, the writer suffered a heart attack while driving his car in Moscow.

The author of 23 novels described himself as an “anti-Soviet Russian writer”. In the 1930s, both, his mother, journalist Yevgenia Ginzburg and his father, a Communist official, were sent to labor camps, while Aksenov was sent to an orphanage.

It was only when he turned 16 did Aksenov see his exiled mother in the far eastern Magadan region. Years later she would become world-renown for her memoir “Journey into the Whirlwind”.

Following his mother’s advice, Aksenov graduated from the Leningrad Medical University and worked as a doctor for a short time. But writing was in his blood and since 1960 it had become the be-all and end-all for him.

In 1979, together with several of his pen-friends, including Andrey Bitov and Fazil Iskander, Aksenov set up their own, uncensored journal entitled “Metropol”. The reaction of the authorities was as following: his colleague-writers were expelled from the official Union of Soviet Writers, and Aksenov immediately joined them in protest and voluntarily left the organization.

In 1980, the author of “The Moscow Saga” (better known as “Generations of Winter”), “The Island of Crimea”, “The Burn”, and “Oranges from Morocco” was forced into exile from the Soviet Union and lived in America for more than 20 years, stripped of his Soviet citizenship.

He was teaching Russian literature at George Mason University in Virginia and worked as a journalist for Radio Liberty.

Aksenov’s novels have been translated into many languages. In recent years the writer who, only in 1990, was given back his Russian citizenship, lived mostly in Biarritz in France, but also spent part of the year in Russia.

In 2004 he won his first literary award, the Russian Booker Prize, for his novel “Voltairiens and Voltairiennes”. The following year Aksenov became the laureate of the highest literary award in France.

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Astraea July 07, 2009, 15:02
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I read "Into the Whirlwind." by Eliza Ginzburg years ago. Everybody should read it. It tells how insane Stalin and his kind were. They were cruel for the sake of being cruel and they were power mad. It was truly horrible. I rmemeber Eliza Ginzburg feeling wretched about having chastised her smaall son for having spilt a bottle of expensive Scent - or perfume, and how prisoners were punished by numbers - it did not matter at all whether one had done anything wrong, or anything at all - punishment came round because you happened to be in "prisoner cell block number ...." and so today you were to be showered with freezing cold water. Als, in spite of being so cruelly treated by the Stalin regime, people Eliza Ginzburg met in the trucks on her way to prison refused to admit that Stalin had anything to do with it! I remember the book very well indeed. Human beings had better learn to be more honest with themselves before it is too late, especially Jewish People.