[ noun ] Russian writer whose best known novel was banned by Soviet authorities but translated and published abroad (1890-1960) <noun.person>
It was one thing for Soviet authorities to announce that Boris Pasternak's elegantly ambivalent novel of the post-revolutionary period, "Dr.
The first half shows us civil war, and the tragic sense of history that we know in Shakespeare, Pushkin, Tolstoy and Pasternak.
Telling jokes like that, Michael Pasternak and Allen Sullivan have expanded an enterprise that began as a sample sock sale out of a pickup truck, into Socks Galore - an $18 million-a-year chain of 62 stores in 34 states.
Included are works by Boris Pasternak, whose classic "Dr. Zhivago," was banned for many years in the Soviet Union.
The Nevada facility was chosen because it had two yards, and "we could be guaranteed that their security would not interfere with our work and our work wouldn't interfere with their security," said Ellen Pasternak, the movie's unit publicist.
"I'd run the Murfreesboro store in the daytime, and Allen would teach all day and run the store at night," Pasternak said.
Viktor Pasternak, first secretary of the Kharabovsk regional party committee, was defeated by collective farm director Yuri Chichik.
During the years Rybakov waited for his blockbuster to appear in print, he lived and worked at his peaceful dacha, or cottage, at Peredelkino, the wooded village where the Nobel Prize-winning poet and novelist Boris Pasternak wrote and is buried.
Russian writer Boris Pasternak studied philosophy in Marburg.
There is a bewildering array of characters. The whole period of Russian history from 1917 to the 1950s is shown through the eyes of scientist Michail Lorenz, who at times has a striking affinity with Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago.
It comes not from the literature of America, but from this country, from one of the greatest writers of the 20th century, Boris Pasternak, in the novel "Dr.
Jerry Pasternak, president of the Kemp Mill Civic Association, said residents were pleased with increased police patrols and there had been no incidents since September.
But the Soviet Union is re-evaluating Pasternak under Mikhail S. Gorbachev's policy of "glasnost," or greater openness on selected topics.
Prior to the lunch, Mrs. Reagan walked from her limousine down a short path to Pasternak's grave, which lies on the edge of a large, treed cemetery across from a pair of potato fields.
He read an excerpt from Boris Pasternak's novel "Dr.