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Хлеб насущный

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В сборник вошли статьи, очерки, выступления известных советских писателей, художественно исследующих актуальные проблемы современной деревни.

512 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1988

About the author

Vladimir Chivilikhin

5 books1 follower
Vladimir Alekseevich Chivilikhin Russian writer. Laureate of the State Prize of the USSR (1982). Member of the CPSU since 1952. The family later family moved to the town of Taiga. After high school he entered the Taiga Chivilikhin College locomotive economy. After a short time he worked in the railway technical master in Node. Moved to Chernigov in the Ukraine to the older sister at the end of the Great Patriotic War. This also moved the entire family Chivilikhin. He was a first meeting with the young Chivilikhin, P.D. Baranowski, the legendary explorer Russian architecture and restorer of world importance.

Baranowski explored the ruined temple after the bombing, which proved a rare monument of the pre-Mongol period (Friday Church beginning of the XII century ). Later, they meet in Moscow and make friends. In his reading of a young Chivilikhin were not Soviet books, among them - "Life" archpriest of Habakkuk. He became a grateful reader 0f bibliophile life. In 1954, he graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University. The distribution received in the metropolitan newspaper, and put him in a hostel on the edge of the park Kuskovo. studied the history of the city, the librarian told him to read "The Tale of Igor's Campaign". A lot of pages are devoted to this book, and in the latter, a major work of the Chivilikhin - in the novel-essay "Memory", where he wrote: "I can not imagine how my life would have developed, if not promptly met with "The Tale of Igor's Campaign." In 1957, published a documentary novel "Manpower". Since 1961 a member of the Writers' Union.

Contemporaries devoted to the story "About Claudia Ivanov" (1964), "Holy-winder" (1965), "Above the Sea" (1967), "Motley's Stone" (1969). Widely known journalistic essays, "A Month in the Kedrograde", "What noise Russian forest?", "Earth is in trouble," "Bright Eye of Siberia" (about Baikal), "Swedish stops."

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