Voroshilovgrad (novel)

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OriginaltitleUkrainian: Ворошиловград
TranslatorReilly Costigan-Humes and Isaac Wheeler
LanguageUkrainian
Voroshilovgrad
AuthorSerhiy Zhadan
Original titleUkrainian: Ворошиловград
TranslatorReilly Costigan-Humes and Isaac Wheeler
LanguageUkrainian
Published2010
PublisherFolio
AwardsJan Michalski Prize for Literature
ISBN978-966-03-5245-2

Voroshilovgrad (Ukrainian: «Ворошиловград», romanized: Voroshylovhrad) is a novel by Ukrainian author and social activist Serhiy Zhadan, published in 2010. In 2016, it was translated from Ukrainian into English by Reilly Costigan-Humes and Isaac Wheeler. The Wild Fields, a film based on the novel, was released in 2018.[1]

Voroshilovgrad won the BBC Ukrainian Book of the Year award in 2010,[2] its Book of the Decade award in 2014,[2] and the Jan Michalski Prize for Literature in Switzerland in 2014.[3] The novel has been translated at least into nine languages.[1]

Voroshylovhrad is a city located in Donbas in eastern Ukraine known as Luhansk after the Soviet Union dissolved. English translators from Russia used historical Russian transliteration of the city's name (with i for и and g for г) when initially translated. In an effort to break the colonial tradition of writing names using Russian phonetics, guidelines from the Ukrainian government (with y for и and h for г)[4] translate the title to "Voroshylovhrad". Both spellings are still used.

Donbas is an industrial region known for its steppe land and coal mining located along the Russian border. Under Stalin, Donbas became the setting for the Stakhanovite movement. In May 2014, when Voroshylovhrad was controlled by the self-declared Luhansk People’s Republic, Zhadan wrote the unrecognised state "exists exclusively in the fantasies of the self-proclaimed 'people's mayors' and 'people's governors.'"[5]

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