- Astafyev, Viktor Petrovich
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▪ 2002Soviet-Russian novelist (b. May 1, 1924, Ovsyanka, Krasnoyarsk kray, Russia—d. Nov. 29, 2001, Krasnoyarsk, Krasnoyarsk kray), drew on his experiences living in a rural village as well as his stint as a volunteer in the front lines during World War II to pen novels that chronicled the bleakness and despair of life in Siberia and the madness and horror of war. As one of the derevenshchiki (“village writers”), Astafyev was renowned for the stark realism of his narratives, which centred on rural people who were removed from Communist Party discipline. Among his most acclaimed works were Tsar-ryba (1980; Queen Fish [1982]), an epic tale about the threat of ecological destruction in Siberia; Pechalny detektiv (1986; “The Sad Detective Story”), a gruesome look at the alcoholism, violence, and animosity among Soviet people; and Proklyaty i ubity (1993; “The Damned and the Dead”), considered one of the most authentic yet disturbing depictions of the effect of World War II on Russian villages. Astafyev's collected works were published by Molodaya Gvardiya in four volumes in 1979–81. He was the recipient of the Hero of Socialist Labour (1989).
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Universalium. 2010.