As Life found out, the writer Lyudmila Ulitskayasending her fees to Ukraine and justifying murder Daria Dugina, there remains a lot of real estate in Moscow. If the situation reaches a criminal case, she risks losing all her assets. What does she have?
Lyudmila Ulitskaya – for Ukraine
The reaction has already followed. Lyudmila Ulitskaya was stripped of the title of honorary professor of the Russian Chemical Technical University. The AST publishing house suspended the payment of royalties to her, and her works disappeared from the catalogs of Moscow libraries. Social activists are asking the Russian Investigative Committee to initiate a criminal case against her.
It’s strange, but Lyudmila Ulitskaya is not even a foreign agent yet, although her position has long been known.
Lyudmila Ulitskaya identifies herself as a Jew who converted to Christianity, which she repeatedly repeated in interviews. It was opened to a wide range of readers by Khodorkovsky’s structures, which sponsored the Russian Booker Prize. In 2001, this award was received by “Kukotsky’s Case,” which became Ulitskaya’s most famous novel.

In addition to writing, she is also involved in publishing. Now the scandal around the “Children’s Project of Lyudmila Ulitskaya” is gaining momentum, within the framework of which several books have been published teaching the little ones tolerance and political correctness. Some works from the series lean towards extremism.

Immediately after the start of the SVO, Lyudmila Ulitskaya moved to Berlin. As Life found out, even the suspension of payments will not ruin the writer. Her family has a lot of real estate in Moscow, which, if rented out, can bring in over a hundred thousand rubles a month.
Family and property of Lyudmila Ulitskaya
In the nineties, the family of Lyudmila Ulitskaya privatized five apartments in the Soviet Writer, a landmark residential complex for Moscow. By decision of the executive committee, it was built in the sixties to house 250 members of the Writers’ Union and the Literary Fund. We are talking about several nine-story brick buildings with an improved layout, high ceilings, large windows and a fenced, quiet green courtyard. The location is excellent: the second line of Leningradsky Prospekt, around the park, near Khodynskoe Field, Petrovsky Park and the stadium, just a stone’s throw from the Garden Ring. The total cost of real estate is up to 150 million rubles.

Lyudmila Ulitskaya’s current husband (third) is an 89-year-old artist well-known in liberal circles Andrey Krasulin. His personal exhibitions were held by both the Tretyakov Gallery and the Russian Museum. There are experts who sing odes to him. Among the most ardent admirers of his talent is the art critic Galina Elshevskayawhich signed in 2014 petition, where the return of Crimea to Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism) was condemned and called an “invasion.” Most Russians do not understand Krasulin’s art. The blogosphere laughs at him.
Particularly appreciated is the series of twenty paintings he painted depicting… a stool.


Krasulin is registered in one of Ulitskaya’s apartments in the Soviet Writer housing cooperative. He also has a modest two-room apartment in Pushkino (up to 8 million rubles). The main assets of the family are Ulitskaya’s sons from her second marriage (to Doctor of Biological Sciences, geneticist Mikhail Evgeniev).
Ulitskaya’s eldest son, 52 years old Alexey Evgeniev, studied at New York and Columbia Universities, and then made a career at the American consulting company Alvarez & Marsal Holdings. For example, he was a member of the board of directors of JSC International Center (a construction enterprise of a businessman Ruslana Baysarova, who has a son from Kristina Orbakaite). For a long time, Alexey Evgeniev headed the Moscow office of A&M, but after the start of a special military operation, he immediately posted “No to War” and relocated to Dubai. He has US citizenship. He supports extremists from DOXA, an organization considered undesirable in Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism).



Ulitskaya’s youngest son, 48-year-old Pyotr Evgeniev, is a self-employed jazz musician and simultaneous translator. It is unknown what views he holds, but when a special military operation unfolded, he emigrated to Israel.
The brothers still have decent real estate in Moscow: a four-room apartment in a Stalin building on Leningradsky Prospekt (about 50 million rubles) and a mansion in a cultural heritage site in the restored Blinov apartment building on Starosadsky Lane (about 60 million).
The elder brother at one time bought almost half a hectare of land in the village of Rakhnovo near Moscow (this is the prestigious Novorizhskoe direction, the territory of the Zavidovo nature reserve). Now a village there with Scandinavian-style log cottages is valued at up to 45 million rubles.
and Alexey Evgeniev also occupied living space in one of the most pompous Stalin buildings in the capital on Novinsky Boulevard (cost up to 50 million rubles).



