ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: FRIDAY, June 11, 1993                   TAG: 9306110065
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL                    PAGE: A-4   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: ROSS SNEYD ASSOCIATED PRESS
DATELINE: CAVENDISH, VT.                                LENGTH: Medium


TOWN STEADFASTLY SHIELDS WRITER FROM WORLD - INCLUDING SELVES

The sturdy sign beside the entrance to the Cavendish General Store is a measure of respect, Vermont-style, for this town's renowned resident - Russian author Alexander Solzhenitsyn.

In small black lettering, it warns the ceaseless trickle of tourists, literature buffs and reporters not to bother even asking for the way to Solzhenitsyn's wooded, hillside retreat three miles out of town.

Store owner Joe Allen said he lost count of how many times treasure hunters made off with his "No Directions to the Solzhenitsyn Home" display. So, a few years ago, he jammed it up against the wall with two 9-inch spikes.

Now that the Solzhenitsyn family is preparing to return to the motherland, the sign could serve as a difficult-to-remove reminder of Cavendish's 17 years as a respectful host to a reclusive celebrity.

"I'll miss the notoriety - I'm a famous person," said Allen, chuckling. "This is my last hurrah. . . . They're good neighbors. I just hope I get to say goodbye."

Few of the 1,373 residents have come in direct contact with the Nobel Prize-winning author of "The Gulag Archipelago" since he settled in this Black River valley town in southern Vermont in 1976, two years after Soviet leaders exiled him for his anti-Communist writings.

But many of them are dogged defenders of the family's privacy.

"This is the way Vermonters are," said Barry Stearns, who works a farm around the bend from the Solzhenitsyn compound. "If you want to mingle, you mingle. If you don't, you don't."

Although the Solzhenitsyns have not been active in town affairs, it hasn't been uncommon to see Solzhenitsyn's wife, Natalya, or her mother, Katerina Svetlova, stopping by the general store.

Solzhenitsyn himself attended a couple of town meetings and caused a minor stir in 1991 when he joined in Cavendish's parade and celebration of the bicentennial of Vermont statehood.

Best-known to the townspeople are the couple's children, Ignat, Stephan and Yermolay, who are now in college. They attended Cavendish's public elementary school and a regional high school in nearby Chester and eagerly filled in their schoolmates on Russian culture.

"It was good for everybody," said Sandra Stearns, whose daughter helped one of the boys - she can't remember which - on homework.

In return, he helped her with subjects and taught her some Russian. It was only natural that they turned out be swear words, Stearns recalled with a laugh.

The Solzhenitsyns will return home once construction is complete on their new brick house in the Troitse-Lykovo resort outside Moscow. Natalya Solzhenitsyn is in Russia overseeing construction and working with the Russian Social Fund, which her husband founded from exile to help other political prisoners.

The couple haven't decided whether to sell the Vermont house where the author spends up to 12 hours a day writing, said Leonard DeLisio, his part-time assistant.

During his years here, Solzhenitsyn has written three multi-volume historical novels spanning World War I and the October 1917 communist revolution. Published in Russian, French and German, they have yet to be translated into English.

He is not now working on any single topic. "He's got all kinds of projects going," DeLisio said.



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