In fact in the perestroika period several were republished, including The GulagArchipelago.
2
In its intent, it has been compared with Solzhenitsyn's GulagArchipelago.
3
The prison library bans many books, including Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's GulagArchipelago about Soviet forced labor.
4
It was infinitely less savage and extensive than the GulagArchipelago but it rested on some of the same assumptions.
5
In 1974, after publishing GulagArchipelago (about life in Soviet prison camps), the writer was exiled from his homeland.
6
The suffering provoked a bloody riot (not mentioned in Ivan Denisovich but fully described in The GulagArchipelago), which was followed by a hunger strike.
7
He revealed a large part of the truth about the past of the Soviet regime in his book "The GulagArchipelago, 1918-1956."