Her verses dedicated to
Vladimir Lenin were first published in 1924. In 1925, she joined a youth literature group 'The Shift' where she became acquainted with
Boris Kornilov. In 1927, Boris and Olga entered the State Institute of Art History, and in 1928, they got married. Same year their daughter Irina was born. Soon the institute was shut down. Some of the students —including Olga, but not Boris— were moved to the
Leningrad University. In 1930, she graduated from the philological faculty and was sent to
Kazakhstan to work as a journalist for the
Soviet Steppe newspaper. During this period Olga divorced Kornilov and married her fellow student Nikolay Molchanov. She also published her first book for children
Winter-Summer-Parrot (1930). After returning to Leningrad in 1931, she started working as a journalist for the newspaper of the electric power plant (
Electric Power). In 1932 she gave birth to her second daughter Maya who died in just a year. Her feelings and thoughts on this period were expressed in such books as
The Out-of-the-way Place (1932),
Night (1935),
Journalists (1934), and
Grains (1935). Such works by Berggolts as
Poems (1934) and
Uglich (1932) were approved of by
Maxim Gorky. In 1934 she joined the
Union of Soviet Writers. During the late 1930s, Berggolts survived several personal tragedies. Her first daughter Irina died in 1936, aged seven, and in 1937, she lost her third child during the full-term pregnancy following the interrogation on the so-called "Averbakh Case" (she contacted
Leopold Averbakh of the
Russian Association of Proletarian Writers at the start of 1930). Soon, her former husband, Boris Kornilov, was arrested "for taking part in the anti-Soviet
Trotskyist organization" and executed in February 1938. In December, Olga herself was arrested on the same account and imprisoned. She spent seven months in prison, but denied all accusations. All this caused a birth of her fourth
stillborn child. During that time period, she wrote poems published as a
Trial anthology during the 1960s. She was subsequently released and completely exonerated in 1939. In 1940, she joined the Communist Party. After a long period of silence, her novel
Dream and a book of stories
Vitya Mamanin were published to a great acclaim, although she had to hide her prison poetry. ==War years==