Aside from some minor verses and translations, Danilevsky's first literary work was a series of stories of Ukrainian life and traditions, collected in 1854 in the book
Slobozhane (
Sloboda dwellers). His first novel,
Beglye v Novorossii (Fugitives in
Novorossiya, 1862), published under the pseudonym D. Skavronsky, brought him wide success; it was followed by
Beglye vorotilis (The return of the fugitives, 1863) and
Novye mesta (New places, 1867), the whole trilogy describing the settlement of the Ukrainian steppe by runaway serfs. His 1868 story "Zhizn cherez sto let" (Life a hundred years from now, 1868) was a work of
science fiction imagining the year 1968. Better known are his novels of the following decades, published in
Vestnik Evropy and
Russkaya Mysl (Russian Thought). In 1874 appeared
Devyaty val (The ninth wave), about the struggle between conservatives and reformers in the 1860s. The following year he wrote
Mirovich, which "deals with the tragic fate of the deposed child-emperor
Ioann Antonovich and the foiled attempt by Lieutenant
Mirovich to free him from
Shlisselburg," but it was banned by the censor and did not appear until 1879;
Isabel Florence Hapgood called it his best novel, "though it takes unwarrantable liberties with the personages of the epoch depicted." It was followed by
Na Indiyu pri Petre (To India in
Peter's day, 1880);
Knyazhna Tarakanova (Princess Tarakanova, 1883), about the self-proclaimed daughter of Empress
Elizabeth;
Sozhzhennaya Moskva (Moscow destroyed by fire, 1886), about
Napoleon's
invasion in 1812;
Cherny god (The black year, 1888), about
Pugachev's Rebellion; and a series of short stories. Though Danilevsky was popular in his day,
Prince Mirsky says he was "looked down by the advanced and the literate," and calls his novels "derivative and second-rate." However, Dan Ungurianu writes, "Despite their lack of conceptual and artistic integrity, Danilevsky's novels remain among the best works of historical fiction of the period." ==English Translations==