Klym Lavrynovych (Lavrentiiovych) Polishchuk (, 25 November 1891, Krasnopil, Zhytomyr Oblast, Ukraine – 3 November 1937, Sandarmokh, Russia) was a Ukrainian journalist, poet and writer.
In August 1914 Klym Polishchuk was arrested for "separatism" activities and exiled to Russia. In 1916 he was deployed to fight in World War I. Gothic Tales from Stalin’s ‘Enemies’ Translated into English , Sova Books, 21 May 2015
In 1920 Klym Polishchuk moved to Lviv, where in 1921 married an upcoming writer, Halyna Mnevska (Halyna Orlivna, pseudonym). The following year their daughter Lesia was born. Klym Polishchuk and Halyna Mnevska divorced in 1927.Bertelsen, Olga (2013) Spatial Dimensions of Soviet Repressions in the 1930s: the House of Writers (Kharkiv, Ukraine), PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
On 4 November 1929, following the falsified charges, Klym Polishchuk was accused of 'bourgeois nationalism' and sentenced to exile and 10 years of hard labour in concentration camps.
Klym Polishchuk's last place of imprisonment, along with 289 other representatives of Ukrainian intelligentsia (including, Mykola Zerov, Hryhorii Epik, Marko Voronyi, Mykola Kulish, Valerian Pidmohylnyi, Mykhailo Yalovy, Valerian Polishchuk, Les Kurbas, and Myroslav Irchan), was the Solovki island prison in the White Sea. He was executed at the peak of the Great Purge in Sandarmokh, Karelia, Russia, on 3 November 1937.
In 1914 Klym Polishchuk's first book, Faraway Stars (Daleki Zori), was published.
In 1919, in Kyiv, Klym Polishchuk joined other Ukrainian authors such as Pavlo Tychyna, Yakiv Savchenko, Les Kurbas, Pavlo Phylypovych, Dmytro Zahul, Oleksa Slisarenko, Mykhailo Ivchenko and Mykhailo Zhuk in establishing Muzahet, a literature and art group that focused on the characteristics of Ukrainian national literature. In 1920 Muzahet was banned and most of its members were later sentenced and executed. Muzahet, Internet Encyclopaedia of Ukraine
Thematically, Klym Polishchuk's prose works are divided into two major groups. The first group consists of works incorporating Ukrainian folklore and legends, including Handful of Earth: Halychyna Legends and Treasure of the Ages: Ukrainian Legends. The second group is composed of historical stories and novels, featuring revolutionary (October Socialist Revolution) and war (World War I) events, Eastern European Writers about their Forgotten War, Schwod, 14 September 2014 such as Red Mirage: Essays and Short Stories of the Revolution Period and Otaman Zelenyi.
Klym Polishchuk's Writing style is often characterised by artful application of symbolism and Gothic fictionKrys, Svitlana (2016) ‘Book Review: Liudmyla Starytska-Cherniakhivska, The Living Grave: A Ukrainian Legend and Klym Polishchuk, Treasure of the Ages: Ukrainian Legends’, EWJUS: East/West: Journal of Ukrainian Studies, Vol 3, No 2, pp. 213–215. elements.
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