Ukrainian Literature

Works is a collection by Yulian Opilskyi, a Galician historical novelist of the early 20th century, a master of adventure-historical prose.

Origami Blues is a poetry collection by Svitlana Povaliaieva, where poems fold like origami figures — elegantly, precisely, and with the inner music of the blues.

Blood Analysis is a novel by Stepan Protsiuk, a literary biography where a writer's life is examined like blood under a microscope — down to its tiniest components.

Stories Without a Title is prose by Valerian Pidmohylnyi, a representative of the Executed Renaissance and master of 1920s Ukrainian modernism.

Instead of Blood is a poetry collection by Svitlana Povaliaieva, poems about what flows in our veins instead of blood — words, memories, pain, and love.

One and the Same — a novel by Ukrainian prose writer Taras Prokhasko, filled with lyrical reflections on time, memory, and the elusive nature of everyday life.

The City — a famous Ukrainian modernist novel by Valerian Pidmohylnyi about a young intellectual who comes to Kyiv and experiences the clash between rural and urban cultures.

Yes, But… — a work by Taras Prokhasko that continues the author's exploration of memory, identity, and the interweaving of past and present.

Amok — a novel by Anton Pospelov exploring the theme of uncontrollable rage and psychological states on the edge of madness.

Stolen Happiness — a classic drama by Ivan Franko about a love triangle in a Galician village, one of the most famous works of Ukrainian dramaturgy.

Zakhar Berkut — a historical novel by Ivan Franko about the heroic defence of a Carpathian community against the Mongol invasion in the 13th century.

Poetic Works — a collection of poetry by Ivan Franko, encompassing the key poetic cycles of the great Ukrainian writer.

Jay's Wing — a novella by Ivan Franko about forbidden love, one of the most poignant works of Ukrainian short prose.

Crossroads — a social novel by Ivan Franko about a Ukrainian lawyer's fight for peasant rights in late 19th-century Galicia.

Foreign, Own, Native — a novel by Iryna Feofanova exploring themes of belonging, family bonds, and the search for personal identity.

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