Zoya Voskresenskaya | |
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Born | Zoya Ivanovna Voskresenskaya 28 April 1907 Uzlovaya, Tula Governorate, Russian Empire |
Died | 12 April 1992 Moscow, Russian Federation | (aged 84)
Occupation(s) | diplomat NKVD foreign agent author |
Years active | 1930s – 1992 |
Spouse | Boris Rybkin |
Awards | Order of Lenin Order of the Red Banner of Labour USSR State Prize (1968) |
Zoya Ivanovna Voskresenskaya (Russian: Зоя Ивановна Воскресенская; in marriage – Rybkina, Рыбкина; 28 April [o.s. 15] 1907 – 8 January 1992) was a Soviet diplomat, NKVD foreign office secret agent and, in the 1960s and 70s, a popular author of books for children. A USSR State Prize laureate (1968), Voskresenskaya was best known for her novels Skvoz Ledyanuyu Mglu (Through Icy Haze, 1962) and Serdtse Materi (A Mother's Heart, 1965). In 1962–1980 more than 21 million of her books were sold in the USSR.
In the late 1980s, as Perestroika incited the wave of declassifications, Zoya Voskresenskaya's story was made public. It transpired that a popular children's writer was for 25 years a leading figure in the Soviet intelligence service's foreign department. Voskresenskaya's war-time memoirs Now I Can Tell the Truth came out in 1992, 11 months after the author's death.[1]