There is a sluggish discussion in the literary milieu about when the post-apocalyptic science fiction genre will go out of fashion. However, works in this style continue to attract readers. Andrey Levitsky remains a sought-after author.
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Children's impressions
In the last two decades, dramatic changes have occurred in the everyday life of an ordinary person. About what consequences await people in the near future, they began to think with a logical type of thinking. First of all, journalists and writers presented their picture of the world. Andrei Yurievich Levitsky became addicted to literary pursuits in his school years. The future science fiction writer was born on April 16, 1971 in an intelligent Soviet family. Parents lived in the city of Kiev. My father worked at a design institute. Mother taught the history of literature at the university.
As a child, Andrei spent almost every summer with his grandmother, in the notorious nowadays Chernobyl. The places here were beautiful. Forests are berry. Pripyat River - clean and fishy. On its banks, Andrei “betrayed” his first poetic lines. Levitsky's whole life left in his memory pleasant impressions of the time spent here. On occasion, he enthusiastically recalls the size of the pike caught on his hook. However, after the ninth grade, entry into the area was strictly prohibited. The accident at the nuclear power plant negatively affected the lives of many people.
Literary activity
In high school, Andrei felt an inner call for writing. And he was engaged in this writing in his spare time from study. After school, Andrew decided to get a specialized education and entered the philological faculty of Kiev State University. However, he soon abandoned his studies and took up more important, at the moment, affairs. After the destruction of the Soviet Union, many large enterprises ceased their activities. Former engineers and hard workers undertook to engage in small business. The undereducated student Levitsky did not stand aside.
The hustle and bustle around their own business required a lot of effort, cost and time. But the result was funny and bitter. After that, Andrey felt that he was again drawn to the desk. More precisely - for the computer. The surrounding reality irritated the former businessman to a greater extent than attracted him. In 2002, the story of the magazine "Threshold" appeared Levitsky's story entitled "Almost complete darkness. The shaman came." And two years later, a children's novel in the fantasy genre Kuksa and Solar Magic was released as a separate book.