The novel begins with a philosophical paragraph about the rarity of infinite kindness in people and the fact that the whole world is maintained thanks to good people. The setting of the novel is the Ukrainian camp for displaced persons in Mittenwald (Germany). The main character of the work, Dmytryk, is a camp thief who is able to skillfully sell the stolen goods. Dmytryk is the leader of a whole group which conducts its activities under his leadership. While telling anecdotes to Tymko, Dmyryk does not notice how his suitcase rolls down into the camp. He receives his suitcase from the camp's kind sorceress, Hrytsykha. A sunflower grows near her house, next to which there is the entrance to hell. Two children calmly pass through hell and return. After them, Stetsko Stupalka, a camp drunkard, also goes to hell. He ends up on
Khreshchatyk, where monuments to Ukrainian national heroes
Taras Shevchenko,
Lesya Ukrainka and others are poured with dirt. Youngsters force Stetsko to do the same, but he hesitates and thereby saves himself from hell by doing a conscientious deed. Fleeing from hell, Stetsko comes across Professor Kava and has a long philosophical conversation with him about goodness. The professor convinces Stetsko that he is good and that he should save one good person in the camp from death at night. He is magically transported to
Samarkand. Upon his return, Stetsko tells Hevryk about his adventures. At this time, Dmytryk's next operation to steal a cow and sell its meat is unfolding near them. Everything went well, but after this operation, a cow appears to Dmytryk in a vision and his conscience awakens. People start turning to him for help. Pyatachykha asks him to break into the apartment, where she thinks to find her son with a girl. By breaking down the door, Dmytryk instead prevents the suicide of Petro Kopylenko, the inventor of biophotons, catalysts of good and destroyers of evil. Next Vasyl Tereshchenko asks Dmytryk to help hime, and Dmytryk testifies in Vasyl's favor. For his rescue, Tereshchenko thanks Dmytryk by giving him lessons in various sciences. Next, Dmytryk agrees to hide the murderer Yosyp among his boys at the request of his wife Teklya. Yosyp causes trouble in Dmytryk's group by temporarily becoming a member of it. The novel ends with Dmytryk saying goodbye to the camp. He decides to start a completely new life. At the last dinner with the camp residents, he delivers a speech about a good person identical to the first paragraph of the novel. Having taken none of his possessions with him, Dmytryk leaves the camp with the desire to become a good person. == References ==