Aleksandr Skorobogatov was born in Grodno in what is now Belarus and has lived and worked in Antwerp, Belgium, since the 1990s. He is widely regarded as one of the most original Russophone writers of the post-communist era. An heir to Dostoevsky, Gogol, Bulgakov and Nabokov – the surreal line of the Russian literary canon – his novels have been published to great acclaim in Russian, Croatian, Danish, Dutch, English, French, Italian, Greek, Serbian and Spanish.
His cult novel Russian Gothic (originally Sergeant Bertrand) received the International Literary Award Città di Penne for its Italian edition and the Best Novel of the Year Award from Yunost, and was praised by The New York Times as “a lambent portrait of madness.” His novel Cocaine (2017) won Belgium’s Cutting Edge Award for Best Book International, and The Raccoon (2020) confirmed his reputation for darkly comic, visionary fiction; the newspaper De Tijd has called him “the best Russian writer of the moment.”
His most recent novel, Achter de donkere wouden (Through the Dark Woods), first published in his own Dutch translation by De Geus in 2025, has become a much-discussed bestseller in the Low Countries. This searing autofiction about the kidnapping and murder of his fifteen-year-old son has been hailed in the press as both a heartbreaking elegy and a furious indictment of the moral collapse of post-Soviet Russia; the English edition, Through the Dark Woods, will be published as a lead title by Old Street Publishing in 2026.
Skorobogatov is the laureate of the 74th Ark Prize of the Free Word (2024), awarded for his outspoken essays on the dictatorships of Belarus and Russia, and of the KU Leuven Honorary Medal (2025), bestowed for his literary oeuvre and his penetrating analyses of Russia’s war logic and Western indifference. He is a member of PEN Vlaanderen.






