Aleksandr Bezymensky

He was the father of war historian Lev Bezymensky, who wrote The Death of Adolf Hitler (1968).

He participated October Revolution and the organization of the Vladimir Union of Communist Youth and edited the newspaper "Struggle and Labor", the journal "Bulletin of the International".

At the same time, in the early 1920s, Bezymensky turned from abstract romantic imagery to real, even everyday life concreteness.

[3] In 1927 Bezymensky alongside other young Soviet traveled abroad to Czechoslovakia, Austria, Italy, Switzerland, France, the poets spent more than 2 weeks in Sorrento with Maxim Gorky.

Since 1919, Bezymensky wrote a number of poems: "Young Proletarian", "Komsomol", "War of the Floors", "Day of Our Life", "Town", etc.

As a result of the author's numerous trips to the Dneprostroy, the poem "Tragedy Night", dedicated to the labor enthusiasm of builders.

[6][7] After the war, Bezymensky continued to write epigrams, criticizing careerism, flattery, and domestic opportunism.

His son was the writer, journalist and historian Lev Bezymensky, who wrote the Soviet propaganda book The Death of Adolf Hitler (1968).

Bezymensky's grave at Novodevichy Cemetery