Ukrainian Literature

Escort to Death is a thriller novel by Iren Rozdobudko where the heroine finds herself at the center of dangerous events, balancing between life and death.

The Button is a novel by Iren Rozdobudko where a small detail — a button — becomes the key to a great mystery. Psychological prose with detective elements.

A Swallow Has Come is a novel by Iren Rozdobudko, lyrical prose about hope, return, and the spring renewal of life.

To the Heron for a Birthday is prose by Mykola Riabchuk, an essayist and intellectual — a lyrical and ironic narrative combining the personal with the public.

The Bead Game is a novel by Iren Rozdobudko where the characters' lives are likened to stringing beads — each event adds a bead to the overall pattern of fate.

Oleniyada is a work by Iren Rozdobudko — an epic canvas about women's fate, family bonds, and generations united by a shared history.

The Feast of the Last Mill is a work by Feodosii Rohovyi, lyrical prose about the rural world fading into the past and the people who preserve its traditions.

Long Times is a novel by Volodymyr Rafeyenko, written in Ukrainian after the author's forced relocation from Donetsk. Prose about losing home, language, and identity.

The Cruelty of Existence is prose by Halyna Pahutiak, a philosophical and mystical book about the nature of cruelty in a world where evil and good are intertwined.

The Black Apple is a novel by Stepan Protsiuk, existential-psychological prose about inner demons, creativity, and the destructive power of the dark sides of human nature.

Five Seconds Five Days is a novel by Yevhen Plozhii, a thriller where five seconds decide the hero's fate and five days change his entire life.

The Eye of the World is prose by Halyna Pahutiak, a mystical work about seeing the world through the prism of the otherworldly, about sight as both gift and curse.

Don't Think is a novel by Svitlana Pyrkalo, ironic urban prose about youth life in Kyiv, self-discovery, and freedom of thought.

An Uncle Named God is a novel by Yevhen Plozhii, philosophical-ironic prose about a person called "Uncle God" and his astonishing effect on those around him.

Fish Children is a novel by Yevhen Plozhii about childhood connected to the water element, about little people whose lives flow like a river — calmly yet unstoppably.

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