She authored more than sixty plays, mostly for children and youth, and adapted classic works such as ''
Uncle Tom's Cabin and Don Quixote'' under a
pseudonym. She also authored a collection of theatrical memoirs,
Pages of the Past (1952).
The Road Goes into the Distance Alexandra Brushtein would become most famous for her autobiographical series
The Road Goes into the Distance: •
The Road Goes Into the Distance (1956) •
At Dawn Hour (1958) •
Spring (1961) •
Flowers of Shlisselburg •
Evening Lights (1963) Written during the
Khrushchev Thaw and thus not so heavily restrained by
Soviet censorship, the book series is considered one of the best examples of
young adult Soviet literature; its popularity has endured in contemporary Russia.
The Road Goes into the Distance shows life in the
Russian Empire during its last decades from the perspective of a
Jewish girl from an educated
urban family. The protagonist slowly grows into a
revolutionary. The
Zionism of the author's father (who chaired the city's Zionist organization) is never mentioned, the role of
Judaism is underplayed, and many
Jewish names of the people who became the prototypes of the book's characters are changed to
Russian names, which may be attributed both to
self-censorship and
censorship due to the
USSR's policy. ,
The Road Goes into the Distance is not translated to English or any other language. The book is "barely known outside the Russian-speaking world". ==Family==