Etibar Eyub — words that connect past and future
Author of the novel "Nets of Oblivion" and collections of essays on culture, memory, and the digital age. Teaches cultural journalism, curates educational initiatives, helps preserve "voices of memory" and school libraries.
Biography
Born in Baku (1986) into a family of teachers: father - Doctor of Philosophy, researcher of Eastern philosophy; mother - literature teacher. From childhood - in the world of books and discussions, first diaries - from age 10.
Studied journalism at Baku State University, then at the University of Vienna (history of ideas and media communication). Published in international publications on culture, memory and identity.
Digital age Cultural identity Ethics and society
Style - journalistic modernism: philosophical depth + documentary + imagery. Etibar sees the writer as a mediator between cultures and generations.
"Literature is a bridge between memory and hope. And the writer is the one who prevents this bridge from collapsing."
Books
Covers are thematically selected, each with a hint symbol. Images load adaptively to screen width.
Voices of Silence

Mirrors of Time

Labyrinths of Identity
Letters to the Future
City and Shadows
Family and Children
Married to Leyla Eyub, an art historian. Two children: Ali (2014) - loves chess and comics; Narmin (2018) - music and drawing. Family is the main source of inspiration, many texts are dedicated to continuity and intergenerational dialogue.
Sports Hobbies
- Chess - strategic thinking and studies in the evenings.
- Running and yoga - concentration and balance, preparation for city runs 10-15 km.
- Swimming and cycling - summer training by the sea and cycling routes along the embankments.
Contacts
For speaking engagements, interviews and publication rights:
Social Programs
Promoting reading in regions: field lectures, book sets for schools, reading clubs for teenagers.
Collecting oral histories of the older generation: audio archive, exhibitions, open publications for students and researchers.
International dialogues about heritage and future, meetings of writers, translators, cultural experts.