
Mikhail Mikhallovich Kotsyubinsky (1864-1913), Ukrainian writer and revolutionary democrat, was born in the family of a clerk in the city of Vinnitsa. His childhood and youth were spent in various villages and small towns of the Ukraine. Grief and need overtook him early. "Our family's misfortunes (his mother went flind and his father lost his post) made me even more thoughtful and earnest," writes Kotsyubinsky. His ties with revolutionary circles subsequently exposed him to cross-examinations, house searches, and secret surveillance by the police. Mikhail Kotsyubinsky began his literary work in 1884, though his name first appeared in print in 1890. A graduate school-teacher by then, the young writer withdrew to a village. Later, he worked some years with a phylloxera commission, as it was called, combatting grape blights in Bessarabia and the Crimea. From 1898 he lived and worked in Chernigov, making several trips abroad, chiefly for his health. It was in Capri (Italy) that he became friends with Maxim Gorky. Mikhail Kotsyubinsky's literary legacy is relatively small. His large two-part narrative "Fata Morgana," regarded as his chief work, presents a comprehensive picture of the life and struggle of the Ukrainian peasants just before and during the Russian Revolution of 1905-1907. In addition, he wrote three shorter narratives and some forty stories on various subjects. Adventitiously, he wrote articles, criticism and poems for the newspapers and magazines.
Author

Mykhailo Mykhailovych Kotsiubynsky (Ukrainian: Михайло Михайлович Коцюбинський), (September 17, 1864 – April 25, 1913) was a Ukrainian author whose writings described typical Ukrainian life at the start of the 20th century. Kotsiubynsky's early stories were described as examples of ethnographic realism; in the years to come, with his style of writing becoming more and more sophisticated, he evolved into one of the most talented Ukrainian impressionist and modernist writers. During the Soviet period, Kotsiubynsky was honoured as a realist and a revolutionary democrat. A literary-memorial museum was opened in Vinnytsia in 1927 in the house where he was born. About twenty novels were published during Kotsiubynsky's life. Several of them have been translated to other European languages.