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Home > Blog >  For the Record: Conversations with Ukrainian Writers
Published:

Malak Mattar, Finding Peace (detail), 2020, oil on canvas

For the Record: Conversations with Ukrainian Writers

This series of intimate wartime conversations between Melnyczuk and an expanding roster of Ukrainian writers appears in collaboration with Arrowsmith Press and the Ukrainian poet and filmmaker Oleksandr Fraze-Frazenko.

Introduction:

The Conversations:
Iya Kiva
Borys and Liudmila Khersonsky (with Marie Howe)
Volodymyr Yermolenko
Victoria Amelina and Roman Avramenko (with Jacki Lyden and Christopher Merrill)
Pavlo Korobchuk
Alim Aliev
Kateryna Mikhalytsyna
Tetyana Teren
Yuri Andrukhovych
Marjana Savka
Lyuba Yakimchuk
Iryna Shuvalova

With more to come!

Portrait of Askold Melnyczuk

Askold Melnyczuk—the founding editor of AGNI, for which he received the PEN/Nora Magid Award for Magazine Editing—is the author of four novels and a book of stories. What Is Told (Faber, 1994), was the first commercially published work of fiction in English to highlight the Ukrainian refugee experience and was named a New York Times Notable. Other novels have been selected as a Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year and an Editor’s Choice by the American Library Association’s Booklist. His most recent book is a collection of stories, The Man Who Would Not Bow. His selected poems, The Venus of Odesa, is forthcoming from Mad Hat in summer 2025. A book of selected nonfiction, With Madonna in Kyiv: Why Literature Still Matters (More than Ever), will be published by Harvard University Press in 2026. He has edited a book of essays on the St. Lucian Nobel Prize–winning poet Derek Walcott and is coeditor of From Three Worlds, an anthology of Ukrainian writers from the 1980s generation. He's the recipient of a Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Writers Award for fiction, the Heldt Prize for translation, and the George Garret Award from AWP for his work in the literary community. Individual poems, stories, essays, and translations have appeared in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, The Gettysburg Review, The Missouri Review, and elsewhere. Also the founder of Arrowsmith Press, he has taught at Boston University, Harvard, and Bennington College and currently teaches at the University of Massachusetts Boston. (updated 5/2025)

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