Barkova's early poetry attracted the attention of the
Bolshevik literary establishment, including the leading critic
Aleksandr Voronsky and the
Commissar of Enlightenment
Anatoly Lunacharsky. Lunacharsky became her patron, and in 1922 she moved to
Moscow to act as his secretary. Also in 1922, her first poetry collection
Woman was published with a foreword by Lunacharsky. In 1923 her play
Nastasya Bonfire was published. She also attended the writer's school in Moscow directed by
Valery Bryusov, and wrote for his paper
Print and Revolution. Later,
Maria Ulyanova, the sister of
Vladimir Lenin, found Anna a position at the paper
Pravda, and helped her to put together a second collection of poems that was never published. ==Imprisonment and exile==