Culture: Other

Vladzislau Akhromenka's selected prose book has been published

The "Kamunikat" Foundation has published Vladzislau Akhromenka's prose book "Niasvizh Crisis" in Bialystok, which includes works of various genres and directions, writes bellit.info.

The book can already be ordered through the publisher's website.

In the new edition, the reader will find the well-known "Conspiracy Theory" – a fast-paced cinematic farce, in which the author, in a paradoxical and harsh form, poses Belarusian questions that many are afraid to even think about. There is also "Muses and Pigs" – a book of urban myths, legends, and apocrypha about the heroes who changed us.

Among the heroes are Grandfather Talash, Dmitry Shostakovich, Kim Il-sung, Vladimir Mulyavin, Jacques-Yves Cousteau, but there are also anonymous actors, directors, musicians, artists, cops, censors, and committee members.

The collection of prose also includes previously unpublished texts of two unfinished novels by Vladzislau Akhromenka: "Niasvizh Crisis" and "The Sound Kidnapper". "Knowing Vladzislau's creative modules," writes his friend and co-author of several books Maksim Klimkovich, "I can state that the first text is about 70% of the intended final volume, and the second is only about 10%."

***

Vladzislau Akhromenka was born on January 29, 1965, in Gomel into a family of a music college lecturer. From childhood, he was involved in music. He graduated from the Sokolovsky Gomel Music College and the Belarusian State Conservatory, piano class.

But soon he chose a different professional occupation – literature. He worked in fast-paced genres – detective, thriller, alternative history, often in co-authorship with Maksim Klimkovich. Under pseudonyms, he published about two hundred commercial novels in Russian, some of which were adapted for the screen. Together with Maksim Klimkovich, he performed a dramatic adaptation of Maksim Haretski's novella "Two Souls" for the Kupala Theater.

He was one of the first volunteers and correspondents on the front during the war in eastern Ukraine. For his activities and participation in the events of 2014, he was awarded the medal "For Dignity and Patriotism". He lived in Minsk, and in recent years – in Chernihiv.

On the night of Tuesday, October 30, 2018, Vladzislau Akhromenka suffered a heart attack in Bialystok, after which he fell into a coma. He died on November 9, 2018. He is buried in Minsk at the Western Cemetery.

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