Dnipro provides a means for young writers to become known in literary circles, and for established writers to experiment in new themes. The periodical published the works of O. Iranets (critique of
In Search of the Castaways), Borys Oliynyk,
Oksana Zabuzhko (
Off-site poem etc.),
Max Kidruk (
Class city narration), Moe pershe kuliove poranennia (
My first bullet wound), Valeriy and Natalia Lapikury (detectives from the series
Inspector i kava [Inspector and coffee]),
Ihor Pavlyuk (
Rezervatsiya [Reservation] novel), critical article "" (Ukraine in search of detectives), and fantasist Oleksiy Tymoshenko (
Hudozhnyk [Artist] narration). In their time it was
Dnipro which published the poetry of
Pavlo Tychyna,
Maksym Rylsky, and
Andriy Malyshko. It was the first periodical to issue the narrative "Molodist" (Youth) by , the novel (
Born of the Storm) by
Nikolai Ostrovsky.
Dnipro included the works of
Volodymyr Sosiura, ,
Petro Panch,
Mykola Bazhan,
Vadim Sobko, and .
Oles Honchar, and Ivan Drach appeared on the pages of the magazine and the works of such artists as
Mykola Vinhranovskiy,
Yevhen Hutsalo, Borys Oliynyk and were published. Also, , Mykola Rudenko, Mykhailo Rudenko, Mykhailo Girnyk, , , , K. Zhurba,
Pavlo Zahrebelnyi, V. Tkachenko, V. Babliak, A. Horunzhyi, and A. Dimarov were among the authors of the magazine.
Dnipro printed the works of Ukrainian Soviet writers that were not published at the time of repression of the 20th–30th and stagnation at the end of the 60th – beginning of the 80th: narrative "Liubov and Kreshchatyk" (Love and Kreshchatyk) by Ivan Sanchenko, poetical tragicomedy "Zmova v Kyevi" (Plot in Kyiv) by
Yevhen Pluzhnyk, play "Arkhitektor Shalko" (Architect Salko) by , the poetry of Volodymyr Sosiura, ,
Borys Antonenko-Davydovych,
Vasyl Stus, and diaries of
Alexander Dovzhenko and
Vasyl Symonenko. The magazine published the novel
Zhyva Voda (Live water) by
Yuriy Yanovskyi, narrative "Zemlya gude" (Earth drones), essay "Charivnyk slova" (Magician of word) by
Oles Honchar, movie-essay "Poema pro more" by
Oleksandr Dovzhenko, novel "Volyn" by B. Harchuk, excerpts from the diary "Dumy moi, Dumy moi" by
Ostap Vyshnia, outline "Molod’ ide vpered" (Youth steps forward) by , and the poetry of
Lina Kostenko,
Vasyl Symonenko, Borys Oliynyk, M. Klymenko, , , etc.
Dnipro contains the investigations of
Dmytro Yavornytsky about
Ivan Sirko, articles by
Symon Petliura, works "Vidrodzhennya natsii" (Renascence of Nation) by
Volodymyr Vynnychenko, "Necropol’ Ukrainy" (Necropolis of Ukraine) and "Istoriya Rusiv" (History of the Rus) by , "Avtobiographiya" (Autobiography) by
Mykola Kostomarov, etc., and works of the writers of the
Ukrainian diaspora. For the first time all literary works of
Oleksandr Dovzhenko were published in
Dnipro, and the author had been collaborating with the magazine until his last days.
Dnipro printed the last novel of
Mykhailo Stelmakh,
Chotyry Brody (Four fords), which highlighted the events of
Holodomor (1932–33).
Dnipro helped to return writers who were repressed and forgotten, who had been writing in Ukrainian outside of Ukraine:
Olena Teliha,
Ivan Bahrianyi (novels ''Sad Hetsymans'kyi'' [Hetman's garden],
Tyhrolovy and
Liudyna bizhyt’ nad prirvoyu [Human runs beyond the abyss]),
Ulas Samchuk (novel Volyn, reminiscences [On the white horse]),
Yevhen Malaniuk,
Yuriy Klen,
Leonid Mosendz, and
Vasyl Barka and many others. The magazine published a 4-volume reading book of 20th century Ukrainian literature and literary critique
Ukrainske Slovo (Ukrainian Word) with the total printing of 600,000 copies sent to the libraries, schools and universities of Ukraine. ==Literary critique==