Vasiliĭ Pavlovich Aksenov
Description
Vasily Pavlovich Aksyonov (Russian: Васи́лий Па́влович Аксёнов) was a Soviet and Russian novelist. He became known in the West as the author of The Burn (Ожог, Ozhog, from 1975) and of Generations of Winter (Московская сага, Moskovskaya Saga, from 1992), a family saga following three generations of the Gradov family between 1925 and 1953.
Books
The new sweet style
The adventures of a Russian actor in 1980s California--from parking attendant to film director. In the process he assesses the Russian emigré scene, the twilight of the Soviet Union and American culture.
Skazhi izi︠u︡m
A comic novel chronicling a dissident photographer's attempt to publish his work in spite of the government.
The winter's hero
Generations of Winter tells the story of the Gradovs, a Russian family struggling to survive amid the convulsions of the Stalin era. In The Winter's Hero, Vassily Aksyonov concludes this remarkable saga in the years following the Second World War. Russia in the 1950s is a world created in the image of an increasingly paranoid Joseph Stalin, a society where campaigns against artists, intellectuals, and others destroy thousands of innocent men and women. It is in this world that the new generation of Gradovs must try to build their own lives. Boris Gradov, son of the fallen hero of Generations of Winter, attempts to bury the pain of his mother's defection to the United States in reckless adventures and the arms of an older woman. Yolka, the poetess Nina Gradov's daughter, is a gifted musician on the brink of womanhood when her beauty catches the eye of a secret-police chief, who snares her in his web of depravity. Even the clan's aging patriarch, Boris III, who has survived revolution, purges, and war, must face a final moral crisis.
