Veronika Tushnova


Veronika Mikhailovna Tushnova was a Soviet poet and member of the Soviet Union of Writers.

Biography

Tushnova graduated from high school where she had pursued advanced studies of foreign languages. After graduating, at the insistence of her father, who wanted her to be a doctor, she entered the Leningrad Medical Institute where she studied for four years prior to 1935.
In 1936, after the death of her father and mother, she moved back to Leningrad, where she received her medical degree, but she found little satisfaction in being a doctor. At this time she married a psychiatrist named George Rozinsky. She moved to Moscow and was admitted to Gorky Literary Institute in 1941, but never finished it because of the beginning of the war. She served in World War II as a medical assistant in military hospitals.
Her first works were printed in 1944. She published several collections of poems: First Book, Pathway. Her keen lyrical talent was revealed in the collections Memory of the Heart, One Hundred Hours of Happiness and others, in which she writes about higher love and calls for truly human relations among people. One of her most popular poems was They don't renounce loving. It was performed as :ru:Не отрекаются любя|a song by Alla Pugacheva.
She also worked as a literary translator. She died from cancer in Moscow on July 7, 1965.

Family

She was married twice, but both marriages ended in divorce. She had a daughter from her first marriage named Natalia.
In her last years Tushnova was involved in an affair with the poet Alexander Yashin, but he couldn't leave his family. Yashin died exactly three years after Tushnova, also from cancer.

Poetry collections