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Vil Vladimirovich Lipatov
Виль Липатов
Life Time
10 April 1927 - 1 May 1979
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Soviet writer Vil Vladimirovich Lipatov was born on April 10, 1927 in Chita in the family of a journalist and a teacher.
In 1952, Vil Lipatov graduated from the Tomsk State Pedagogical Institute, the Faculty of History, and after graduation he worked until 1958 as a journalist and head of the department of the Tomsk regional newspaper Krasnoe Banner.
From 1964 to 1966 he worked as a special correspondent in the newspaper “Soviet Russia” in Chita, then in Bryansk, and since 1967 as a correspondent
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Soviet writer Vil Vladimirovich Lipatov was born on April 10, 1927 in Chita in the family of a journalist and a teacher.
In 1952, Vil Lipatov graduated from the Tomsk State Pedagogical Institute, the Faculty of History, and after graduation he worked until 1958 as a journalist and head of the department of the Tomsk regional newspaper Krasnoe Banner.
From 1964 to 1966 he worked as a special correspondent in the newspaper “Soviet Russia” in Chita, then in Bryansk, and since 1967 as a correspondent in the newspapers “Pravda”, “Izvestia”, “Literary Gazeta”.
In 1956, Vil Lipatov published the first stories “Airplane stoker” and “Two in a veal”.
In 1958, Lipatov published his first book. The fame of the author brought his story “The Tale of Director Pronchatov”, later – the novel “And this is all about him”. The script for the tape of the same name was also written, which received the Lenin Komsomol Prize in 1978, and the story “Village Detective” was the basis for the script of the film trilogy “Village Detective”, “Aniskin and Fantomas”, “And Again Aniskin”. In each of the parts of the famous trilogy, policeman Aniskin reveals mysterious crimes committed in the village. This fact makes the viewer humorously treat the film - after all, in the village almost every resident knows who and what breathes.
The story of Vil Lipatov in 1971 “Even before the war” reliably showed the village life and customs of a Siberian village before the Great Patriotic War.
Vil Lipatov wrote his works in the genre of a production novel, but his works in the context of Soviet prose looked psychologically reliable and quite problematic.
Vil Lipatov in the last years of his life served as Secretary of the Union of writers of the USSR.
The writer died on May 1, 1979. He was buried at the Kuntsevo cemetery in Moscow.