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Yulian Semyonov bibliography
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Yulian Semyonov bibliography : ウィキペディア英語版
Yulian Semyonov bibliography

In 1960, reporter Yulian Semyonov became a member of the USSR Union of Writers and after that actively worked as a writer within almost 30 years. Semyonov achieved a wide renown in the USSR with his novel series, “Political Chronicles” by the common name, united by the principal character, Soviet scout Isaev – Stierlitz. Time Magazine's reporter John Kohan defined him as "the Soviet James Bond".〔''(The KGB: Eyes of the Kremlin )''. Time magazine14 February 1983|accessdate=October 21, 2012〕 In the USSR (and later in Russia) there were published more than 100 million of this series books.〔Klaus Mehnert The Russians and their Favorite Books (1983) ISBN 978-0-8179-7821-1〕 The novels of this cycle were translated into many world languages. Later, in so called “Militia Series” novels (“Petrovka, 38”, “Ogareva, 6”), Semyonov introduced the “police procedural” construction in Soviet literature.
== Early Works ==

The story “Diplomatic Agent”, the first noticeable work published, was written in 1958 after the trip to Kabul, where Semyonov was assigned to a job of the Pashto and Dari interpreter in 1955.
Semyonov’s first fiction works were by no means the adventure novels – they were full of romanticism and ran about ordinary toilers: “Five Stories from Geologist N. N. Ryabinina’s Life” (1958) – the short-stories cycle about geologists, “Weekdays and Holidays” (1959) – the short-stories cycle about builders of the taiga mainline, “People Storm the Sky” (1960) – collected stories about the builders of the East-Siberian mainline, “… On the Official Duty” (1962) – the story about polar pilots (this story was one of the most noticeable “anti-Stalin” works published by the “Yunost” magazine at the beginning of the 1960s ), “The Rain in the Rainwater Pipes”, “My Heart is in the Mountains”, “Farewell to the Beloved Woman” and many others.
In 1962 there was published the autobiographical short stories cycle “37-56” (“In the Summer of the Thirty-Seventh”, “The Autumn of the Fifty-Second”, “That Night in Yaroslavl”, “Soldier’s Fate in America”, “The First Day of Freedom”) on the “anti-Stalin” topic. In the end of the 1980s Semyonov got back to these stories and included them into the final edition of “Unwritten Novels”.

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