Mykhailo Mykhailovych Kotsiubynsky (Ukrainian: 袦懈褏邪泄谢芯 袦懈褏邪泄谢芯胁懈褔 袣芯褑褞斜懈薪褋褜泻懈泄), (September 17, 1864 鈥� 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.
Its not that I don't like Ukrainian Romantism as the first (and sometimes only) thing that comes to one's mind when talking about Ukrainian Literature, but God isn't the deeply-psychological, paradoxical Kotsiubynsky one of the best things I've ever read.