Background
Lev (in Russian it also means a “lion”) was born in the family of two teachers from central Russia, one of five children (he had three brothers and a sister).
Lev (in Russian it also means a “lion”) was born in the family of two teachers from central Russia, one of five children (he had three brothers and a sister).
When he was 16 he finished school with honors – early - and wanted to help his family, and so he came to work to a ship that delivered cargo to and from America during World World War II and worked there for a year.
His most famous novel “Morskoi Protest’ (Sea Protest) was sold 2 million copies in just one year. Though his creative heritage is primarily in prose, he is considered one of the brightest artists of the Perestroika times, the signer of beautiful people who kept their souls pure in the most challenging times. His family had to move around a lot in search of new jobs – those were the hard times of the rulings of Stalin and later Khrushchev.
At 17 he was accepted to the University and got a Degree of an Engineer in less than 4 years.
The two were together for almost 64 years until his death in 2012. The couple had three children.
Throughout the famished and poor existence right after World World War II and hardships of Communist regime, he kept his spirit high and never lost hope and trust in the people of his home country. He became close friends with American author, historian and activist Jay Higginbotham, who politically advocated a doctrine of American reconciliation between countries such as the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics and Cuba.
In 1986, Knyazev and Higginbotham took a trip through Russia and helped create sister-city relationship between Mobile and the Russian city of Rostov.
He was recognized as an Honorary Citizen of the City of Natchitoches by the mayor in acknowledgement of the effect his visit had on the city life. In 1990s Russia was going through the collapse of the communist ruling and the whole state of life everybody was used to Already in his 70s, Lev Knyazev was still working, started writing lyrics and poetry, and hosted clubs for young aspiring poets and writers.
He was very popular in his home city of Vladivostok, was a long-time Chairman of the Literary Union of Primorye, and was awarded the title of Honorary Citizen of the City of Vladivostok.
His political views developed over time – raised in the family of members of the party, he first trusted the regime, but later realized that he – as millions of his fellow countrymen – was deceived by the propaganda.
Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics Union of Writers.