Serebryakova's convictions were overturned after
Nikita Khrushchev had denounced Stalin's crimes at the 20th party congress in 1956, and she was able to return to Moscow and resume work on her life of Marx. The second volume appeared in 1961, and the third volume in 1962. The completed novel was turned into a film,
A Year is a Like a Lifetime (1965) for which she persuaded the Soviet Union's greatest composer,
Dmitri Shostakovich, to write the music. She had known the composer since the 1920s, when - according to the controversial writer,
Solomon Volkov, they were lovers. Other biographers of Shostakovich describe them simply as close friends. He regretted accepting this assignment and considered it a failure. She also wrote an account of her imprisonment and exile,
Smerch (Whirlwind), which could not be published in the Soviet Union. It first appeared in an emigre journal in Paris, in 1967, and was published in Russia, posthumously, in 2005. In 1961, Serebryakova announced in
Pravda that during her long imprisonment she did not "lose faith in our Leninist party or in the all-conquering teaching of Marx and Lenin". This made her an important ally of the party leader
Nikita Khrushchev, both against hard line communists who resented his denunciation of
Joseph Stalin, and liberals who wanted more liberalisation of the communist regime. On 17 December 1962, she participated in a meeting of 400 representatives of the arts, in the presence of Khrushchev and other party leaders, and launched an attack on the writer
Ilya Ehrenburg, who was leading the campaign for more liberalisation, accusing him of having acted as 'Stalin's mouthpiece', and suggested that he had caused the deaths of members of the
Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee in 1948–52. This outburst was excluded from the published record of the meeting. This appears to have been the occasion when, according to Volkov: On 17 April 1964, she was of the speakers at a banquet in the Kremlin to celebrate Khrushchev's 70th birthday, and hailed him as "one of the truly superior men of our time...The whole world knows and honours him. It is difficult to imagine a simpler, more approachable, more cheerful man...one of the most original and outstanding orators of our time..." Her support for Khrushchev aroused the hostility and contempt of other Gulag survivors, such as the Nobel laureate
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, who described her as a "loud mouth", and alleged that she enjoyed a privileged status in the Gulag by being allowed to work as a nurse, though she had no medical training. He also hinted at rumours that she was an informant, though added: "I did not have the opportunity of checking this." According to her daughter, Geliana, in the last five years of her life Serebryakova was "offended by the Writers' Union, for spreading rumors and gossip" and suffered physically and mentally as a result. She died in 1980. ==References==