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Mikhail Sholokhov: 5 facts about the ‘And Quiet Flows The Don’ author & Nobel Prize winner

Pavel Gorshkov / Sputnik
May 24 marks the anniversary of Soviet author Mikhail Sholokhov’s birth. Let's recall the most interesting facts about his life and works.

Mikhail Sholokhov is most famous for his epic four-volume novel ‘And Quiet Flows the Don’ (1928-1932) about Don Cossacks during World War I and the subsequent Civil War. It’s a must-read of classic Russian literature, with its author sparking mystery, controversy and praise in equal measure. 

1) The famous 'Cossack' author was not a Cossack

Sholokhov spent his childhood on a Cossack ‘khutor’ – a single homestead or a small collection of homesteads – but it is not exactly known where he was born.

Pyotr Glebov as Cossack Grigory Melekhov and Elina Bystritskaya as Aksinya
Sergei Gerasimov / Gorky Film Studio, 1958

Although Sholokhov wrote so vividly and extensively about Cossacks, he was not actually a Cossack. His father was a middle-class manager of a steam mill, while his mother was a peasant who had been a servant before her marriage. Sholokhov was born as an illegitimate child, since his mother had been forced to marry the other man, rather than his father. It was only after the writer’s stepfather died that his parents could finally get married. 

2) Sartre gave him a helping hand

In 1964, French writer and philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre rejected the Nobel Prize for Literature, writing a statement expressing regret that the previous prize had not been awarded to Sholokhov and that "the only Soviet work that received the prize was a book published abroad and banned in its own country" (referring to 'Doctor Zhivago' by Boris Pasternak, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958).

Jean-Paul Sartre in Paris
Dominique BERRETTY/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

It is believed that this statement influenced the Nobel Committee and the prize was awarded to Sholokhov the following year "for the artistic power and integrity with which, in his epic of the Don, he has given expression to a historic phase in the life of the Russian people". 

3) Was mysteriously released from prison

Sholokhov worked from the age of 15 in various professions, including as a porter and a schoolteacher. In 1922, while working as a village tax inspector, he was arrested for taking a bribe and sentenced to death by firing squad at a tribunal.

Broadcasting on radio
Pavel Gorshkov / Sputnik

His father paid the hefty bail and produced a new certificate to the court stating that Sholokhov was 15 years old rather than 17. The death sentence was, thereby, commuted to a year in a penal colony for minors. Sholokhov was transported to the colony under escort, but he never arrived and did not serve any time. It is unclear exactly what happened during that journey.  

4) Was suspected in plagiarism

Mikhail Sholokhov working
Ivan Denisenko / Sputnik

Some critics challenged Sholokhov’s authorship of 'And Quiet Flows the Don', alleging that he had taken credit for the work of a White officer, who had been shot by the Bolsheviks. These doubts were also fuelled by the view that such a profound, lengthy, subtle work could not have been written by a barely educated 21-year-old.

Sholokhov's supporters responded by pointing to young geniuses like Johann Goethe, Thomas Mann and John Keats, as well as the poorly educated Maxim Gorky and Ivan Bunin (also a Nobel laureate).

The issue was finally resolved in 1984, when the Slavicist Geir Kjetsaa and his colleagues conducted extensive linguistic tests on the work that supported Sholokhov’s authorship authenticity. 

5) He had a conflict with Solzhenitsyn

The two authors, both Nobel laureates, had a prickly relationship. Sholokhov wrote a highly critical review of Solzhenitsyn’s work 'One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich', while Solzhenitsyn responded by rekindling the accusations of plagiarism against Sholokhov.

Alexander Solzhenitsyn
Steve Liss / Getty Images

In turn, Sholokhov supported Solzhenitsyn’s persecution and signed the infamous letter sent by a group of Soviet writers to the editor of Pravda newspaper on August 31, 1973, in which Solzhenitsyn and Sakharov were accused of trying to "generate distrust towards the Soviet state’s peaceable policies". In addition, Sholokhov, who was a supporter of the Communist Party, opposed awarding Solzhenitsyn's novel 'One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich' the ‘Lenin Prize’.

The authors would later refuse to comment on their view of each other’s works.

BONUS: Sholokhov’s novel 'And Quiet Flows the Don' was screened several times

Alexander Yatsenko as Mikhail Koshevoy
Sergei Ursulyak / Rossiya-1 TV Channel, 2015

The novel was adapted for the screen three times in Russia during the 20th century (1930, 1958 and 1992). The 1958 screen version made by renowned director Sergei Gerasimov won numerous international awards.

Cameraman Vladimir Rapoport on the set of Sergei Gerasimov's version, 1957
TASS

The equally famous movie director Sergei Bondarchuk, who had already won an Oscar and a Golden Globe for his screen version of 'War and Peace', directed the third version.

This movie was co-produced by the USSR, UK and Italy. The Italian producer filed for bankruptcy and an Italian bank seized the almost completed movie as part of the debt proceedings.

Rupert Everett as Grigory Melekhov and Dolphin Forrest as Aksinya
Sergei Bondarchuk, Fyodor Bondarchuk/Mosfilm, Madison Motion Pictures, 2006

Bondarchuk died before being able to see the movie on screen; his son, Fyodor Bondarchuk, later produced an abridged version for TV.