Konstantin Vorobyov

Konstantin Dmitrievich Vorobyov
Born (1919-09-24)September 24, 1919
Kursk region, Soviet Russia
Died March 2, 1975(1975-03-02) (aged 55)
Vilnius, Lithuania (then USSR)
Period mid-1940s – 1970s
Genre fiction
memoirs
Subject Great Patriotic War
Notable works The Scream (1962)
Slain Near Moscow (1963)

Konstantin Dmitrievich Vorobyov (Константи′н Дми′триевич Воробьё′в; September 24, 1919 – March 2, 1975) was a Russian Soviet writer, a War hero and a major exponent of the "lieutenants' prose" movement in the Soviet war literature. Vorobyov, who was born in the Kursk region, Soviet Russia but spent most of his life in Vilnius, Lithuania (then in the USSR; also his deathplace), wrote 10 short novels (best known is Slain Near Moscow, 1963) and 30 short stories, many of which were either unpublished in his lifetime or suffered greatly from massive censorial cuts. According to the poet, critic and literature historian Dmitry Bykov, Vorobyov was "the most American of all Russian writers, a strange mix of Hemingway and Capote".[1][2]

Select bibliography

References

  1. Bykov, Dmitry. "Zhivoy (The Alive One)". Izvestya. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
  2. "Koнстантин Воробьев". www.peoples.ru. 2005. Retrieved 2014-01-13.
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