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Я думал, я чувствовал, я жил. Воспоминания о Маршаке

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В этой книге собраны воспоминания людей, встречавшихся с С.Я.Маршаком или работавших вместе с ним в разные периоды его жизни. "Говорят, что любимого поэта не обязательно знать лично. Поистине: слово поэта - это его дело. Но знать лично Самуила Яковлевича было огромной радостью", - говорил Александр Твардовский. Этой радостью общения с Маршаком - поэтом, редактором, неутомимым организатором детской литературы, интереснейшим собеседником - делятся на страницах книги все, кто знал С.Я.Маршака.

589 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1971

2 people want to read

About the author

Alexander Fadeyev

23 books16 followers
Alexander Alexandrovich Fadeyev (Russian: Александр Алексaндрович Фадеев) was a Soviet writer, one of the co-founders of the Union of Soviet Writers and its chairman from 1946 to 1954.

From 1908 to 1912 he lived in Chuguyevka, Primorsky Krai. He took part in the guerrilla movement against the Japanese interventionists and the White Army during the Russian Civil War. In 1927, he published the novel The Rout (also known as The Nineteen), in which he described youthful guerrilla fighters.

In 1945 he wrote the novel Young Guard (based upon real events of World War II) about the underground anti-fascist Komsomol organization named Young Guard, which fought against the Nazis in the occupied city Krasnodon (in the Ukrainian SSR). For this novel, Fadeyev was awarded the Stalin Prize (1946). In 1948, a Soviet film The Young Guard, based on the book, was released, and later revised in 1964 to correct inaccuracies in the book.

Fadeyev was a champion of Joseph Stalin, proclaiming him "the greatest humanist the world has ever known". During the 1940s, he actively promoted Zhdanovshchina, a campaign of criticism and persecution against many of the Soviet Union's foremost composers. However, he was a friend of Mikhail Sholokhov. Fadeyev married a famous stage actress, Angelina Stepanova (1905–2000).

In the last years of his life Fadeyev became an alcoholic. Some sources claim, that this was mostly due to the denunciation of Stalinism during the Khrushchev Thaw. He eventually committed suicide at his dacha in Peredelkino, leaving a dying letter, from which one can see Fadeyev's strictly negative attitude to new leaders of the Party. His death occasioned an epigram by Boris Pasternak, his neighbor.

Alexander Fadeyev is buried in the Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow.

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