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Sergey Aleksandrovich Trakhimenok | |
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Born | Сяргей Аляксандравіч Трахімёнак February 7, 1950 Karasuk, Novosibirsk Region, Russia |
Occupation(s) | writer, screenwriter |
Sergey Aleksandrovich Trakhimenok, (Belarusian: Сяргей Аляксандравіч Трахімёнак, born February 7, 1950, in Karasuk, Novosibirsk Region[1]) is a Belarusian writer who publishes in the Russian language. He is also a screenwriter, Doctor of Law, professor, secretary of the Belarusian Writers' Union, and a member of the Union of Russian Writers.
He is the author of thirty books of prose, the laureate of the "Gold Cupid" National Award (Belarus), the "Reward of the Ural Federal District", and an active associate of Association of Writers of Ural, Siberia and Povolzh'ya.
According to the philological scientific research of Russian Professor Alla Bolshakova: Russian-Belarusian writer Sergei Trahimenok belongs to the cohort of those "marginal" writers who continue to create works in Russian, despite the difficult process of rebuilding national identity in the former Soviet republics.[2]
Trakhimenok is best known for his spy novel, Notes of a Black Colonel, psychological detective novel Burnout Syndrome (2008), and A Petri Bowl or Russian Civilization: the Genesis and Survival Problems (2012). As a screenwriter, he is a member of BELVIDEOCENTER. In 2014, he received the Finalist Certificate at the New York Festivals of World Best TV & Films in the competition Television – Documentary/Information Program in the category of Docudrama for his screenplay for the film Albert Veinik's Attraction.