Yerofeyev claimed to have written a novel about composer Dmitri Shostakovich in 1972, but the manuscript was allegedly stolen on a train and has never been found. Biography & "Outsider" Lifestyle
Venedikt Yerofeyev (1938–1990) was a seminal Russian writer and Soviet dissident, best known for his cult classic prose poem (also translated as Moscow-Petushki or Moscow Stations ). Often described as a "comic high-water mark of the Brezhnev era," his work blended high-brow philosophy with "gutter-level" drunken comedy to critique the spiritual emptiness of Soviet life. Key Literary Works Venedikt Yerofeyev
A hallucinatory, semi-autobiographical odyssey following the protagonist Venya on a train journey toward a "paradise" (Petushki) that remains forever out of reach. It circulated for decades in clandestine samizdat editions before its official Soviet publication in 1989. Yerofeyev claimed to have written a novel about