- Velyka Oleksandrivka Library
- E-Library Catalog
- Literature
- Ukrainian Literature
Ukrainian Literature
- Goods 496-510 из 725
-
Show all
Petersburg Tales is a cycle of stories by Mykola Hohol (1830s–1840s) including Nevsky Prospect, The Nose, The Portrait, The Overcoat, and Diary of a Madman. A grotesque depiction of St. Petersburg life.
Mysticism and Reality is a thematic collection of selected works by Mykola Hohol uniting texts where the mystical interweaves with realistic depictions of life.
Thirteen Novellas is a collection by Yuliia Vainonen uniting thirteen short stories, each a complete world with an unexpected resolution.
Dramatic Works is a collection of plays by Borys Hrinchenko, a prominent Ukrainian writer, educator, and lexicographer, author of the first Dictionary of the Ukrainian Language.
Heather Meads is a work by Nataliia Humeniuk permeated with lyrical images of nature, the poetics of Ukrainian land, and reflections on a person's connection to their roots.
The Denunciation is a novel by Oleksa Havrosh devoted to the themes of denunciations, surveillance, and paranoia in a totalitarian society where anyone can become victim or executioner.
August, a Flash of Love is lyrical prose by Yevhen Hutsalo, one of the leading Ukrainian writers of the 1960s generation, celebrating nature, love, and the fleeting nature of human happiness.
Where Is Your Home, Odysseus? is essayistic prose by Tymofiy Havryliv addressing themes of home, homelessness, and eternal wandering in the modern world.
The Gift of Yevdoteia, a Test of Memory is a work by Dokiia Humenna (1904–1996), an outstanding Ukrainian emigrant writer who explored the most ancient history of Ukraine through mythology and archaeology.
The Cranes Have Flown is a work by Roman Horak permeated with nostalgia for a vanished world, the image of cranes in flight as a symbol of parting and the irreversibility of the past.
Selected Works is a collection of the best texts by Borys Hrinchenko, including prose, poetry, and essays by the prominent Ukrainian writer and educator.
My Name Is Maryam is a novel by Natalka Herbish about a young Muslim woman facing questions of identity, faith, and belonging in contemporary Ukrainian society.
Circle of Life is a work by Mykola Holovatyi devoted to the theme of the life cycle, the recurrence of fates, and the enclosed nature of existence within the circle of renewal and decline.
Where Never is a work by Lesia Holota addressing the themes of lost opportunities, places one cannot return to, and time that never repeats.
Warm Stories for Coffee is a collection of cozy stories by Natalka Herbish, created for reading over a cup of coffee: about love, friendship, small joys, and moments of happiness.
