Vasyl Stus
Author Profiles

About the Author:

Vasyl Stus
Vasyl Stus
born in Rakhnivka, Ukrainian SSR. died in Perm-36, Kuchino, Russian SFSR

Vasyl Semenovych Stus (Ukrainian: Василь Семенович Стус; 1938, Rakhnivka, Ukrainian SSR – 1985, Perm-36, Kuchino, Russian SFSR) was a Ukrainian poet, translator, literary critic, journalist, and an active member of the Ukrainian dissident movement. For his political convictions, his works were banned by the Soviet regime and he spent 13 years in detention until his death in Perm-36—then a Soviet forced labor camp for political prisoners, subsequently The Museum of the History of Political Repression—after having declared a hunger strike on September 4, 1985. Stus is widely regarded as one of Ukraine’s foremost poets.

Bookshelf
61JSYBp5DJL._SL1000_
by Boris Khersonsky, Ludmila Khersonsky

Boris Khersonsky and Ludmila Khersonsky write poetry that speaks to the crisis of our time, when refugees run from bombardments, and nonstop propaganda flows from TV. The setting is Ukraine at the start of the twenty-first century, but it is eerily recognizable anywhere.

Shabalin s book cover
by Sergei Shabalin

A new book of poems by New York poet and essayist Sergei Shabalin. In Russian.

Agent Dmitri
by Emil Draitser

Sailor, artist, lawyer, and writer, Dmitri Bystrolyotov was one of a team of Soviet spies operating in the West between the World Wars. He seduced women to learn great secrets of foreign states, but was then arrested and tortured in the Gulag, where he began to document the crimes against humanity of the regime he had served.

Romm
by Michael Romm

This book features biographies of the author’s family members, detailing with the effect of the war on their lives.

Videos
No data was found