Background
Vladimir Lichutin was born in the town of Mezen, Arkhangelsk Oblast, into the family of a teacher. His father was killed in the Great Patriotic War and mother alone had to raise four children.
Vladimir Lichutin was born in the town of Mezen, Arkhangelsk Oblast, into the family of a teacher. His father was killed in the Great Patriotic War and mother alone had to raise four children.
In 1960 Lichutin graduated from the local timber-processing industrial school and enrolled into the Leningrad University"s faculty of journalism.
Most of Lichutin"s novels and novelets are based on the life of real people of the coastal White Sea areas of his native Pomorje region. After the graduation in 1962 he returned to Arkhangelsk to work as a journalist for the local newspaper Pravda Severa. Litchutin debuted with the The White Room novelet, published in the Number.
8, 1972, issue of Sever magazine.
lieutenant was followed by Iona and Alexandra (1973), Long Rest (1974) and The Marriages" Time (1975). Among Vladimir Lichutin"s best known 1970s works were Soul"s Burning (1976) and Winged Seraphima (1978), both praising native Pomors " traditional values, their ascetic way of life and high moral standards.
Lichutin took part in several folklorist expeditions which provided him with rich linguistic material he has since then incorporated into his prose. In 1975, after graduating the Higher literary Courses at the Soviet Union of Writers he settled in Moscow, but continued to visit his native region regularly.
His next one, Lyubostai (1987), criticized what he saw as contemporary Soviet intelligentsia"s lack of "moral firmness" and examined the spiritual crisis of the Russian people of the second half of the 20th century.
Vladimir Lichutin"s epic Raskol (1990-1996) is rated as his outstanding novel. Years later it brought him first the prestigious Yasnaya Polyana Award (2009), then The Russian Government"s State Prize (2011). The 2000 book of essays called Soul Inexplicable (subtitled: "Thinking of Russian People") was praised for its colourful, highly stylized "skaz" type of language.
Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics Union of Writers.