Gleb Vasilyevich Alekseev (1892–1938). Born into a family of a rural teacher, of Polish origin.
Information about Gleb Alekseev is extremely confusing. It is known for sure that the following: before World War I he worked for newspapers, was drafted to the front, served in aviation, and was wounded.
During the Civil War, most likely, he served in the White Army (he carefully concealed this fact later). In the early 1920s he was in emigration, first in Yugoslavia. Around 1922 he moved to Berlin, where a large colony of Russian writers existed. He was subjected to harassment by uncompromising émigrés.
In 1923 he returned to the USSR, where he published a great deal. He was arrested on April 26, 1938, sentenced for participation in an anti-Soviet terrorist organization, and was shot on September 1. He was rehabilitated in 1956.
Contents:
1. Maria Hamilton (Reads: Yegor Serov)
2. Dunyikino happiness. (Reads: Anastasia Busygina)
3. Other eyes (Reads: Yegor Serov)
3. Gardens (Reads: Yegor Serov)