Solzhenitsyn: A Biography |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 77
Page 318
... sent into exile had taken an exponential leap with collectivization in the years after 1929. Throughout the thirties and forties , many millions were sent into exile , including , during or after the war , whole peoples , such as the ...
... sent into exile had taken an exponential leap with collectivization in the years after 1929. Throughout the thirties and forties , many millions were sent into exile , including , during or after the war , whole peoples , such as the ...
Page 490
... sent her a detailed critique , but when she sent him another story , he declined to reply . As a successful author , he was beginning to receive more and more of these requests , especially through the mail , and he decided to resort to ...
... sent her a detailed critique , but when she sent him another story , he declined to reply . As a successful author , he was beginning to receive more and more of these requests , especially through the mail , and he decided to resort to ...
Page 549
... sent them to the West , and in 1960 they had been published under the pseudonym of Abram Tertz . In the same year Mikhail Naritsa's Unsung Song had appeared in Frankfurt ( pseudonym - Mikhail Narymov ) , and a year later , Yuli Da ...
... sent them to the West , and in 1960 they had been published under the pseudonym of Abram Tertz . In the same year Mikhail Naritsa's Unsung Song had appeared in Frankfurt ( pseudonym - Mikhail Narymov ) , and a year later , Yuli Da ...
Contents
Preface | 13 |
Acknowledgements | 21 |
1 OUT OF CHAOS AND SUFFERING | 25 |
Copyright | |
54 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
able According allowed already appeared arrest arrived asked authorities become called camps Cancer Ward Circle complete continued copy course criticism described discuss early experience fact feelings felt friends German given Gulag Archipelago hand head idea interest Ivan Denisovich Kopelev labour later leave less letter literary literature living looked March matter meeting months Moscow move Natalia never novel Novy once Party perhaps planned play political possible prepared prisoners publication published question reason received refused remained response Rostov Russian Ryazan seemed sent side Solzhe Solzhenitsyn Soviet Union story taken things thought tion told took turned Tvardovsky wanted weeks West Western whole writers written wrote young