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Pirimqul Qodirov — an uzbek writer.He was born in 1928 October 25 in  Khujand district of Tajikistan.

In 1951, he graduated from the Faculty of Oriental Studies of the Central Asian State University (now UzNU) and in 1954 he graduated from the post-graduate course of the Institute of Literature in Moscow. He was a candidate of Philological Sciences. His first book - "Students" was published in 1950. The formation of the new generation of Uzbek intellectuals is described in the novel of "Three Roots" (1958). The novel was published in Moscow in 1959.

Career and novels
The life of the mountain village where the writer was born is described in the novel "Black Eyes" (1966). Pirimkul Kadirov is the author of short stories "My value" (1963), "Freedom" (1969), "Heritage" (1975), novel "Diamond Belt" (1977).

Then, for thirty years, he published the historical novels„Starry nights“ (1978), „The offsprings' pass“ (1988),"Mother Falcon's Farewell" (2001), which awakened the historical memory of the people. The novel about Bobur was published 6 times in large circulation in Uzbek and 5 times in Russian. It was also translated into Hindi, Urdu, Bengali, Turkish, Kazakh, Uyghur, Turkmen languages. Pirimkul Kadirov is the author of scientific books as well such as "Language and Soul" (1973), "People's Language and Realistic Prose" (1974), "Thoughts" (1971), "Kalb gavhari" (2001).

Translations
Pirimkul Kadirov translated Leo Tolstoy's  story „Cossacks“, Konstantin Fedin's „First joys“, H. Deryaev's „Destiny“ .Pirimkul Kadyrov translated Leo Tolstoy's story "Cossacks", Konstantin Fedin's "First Joys", H. Deryaev's novel "Kismat" into Uzbek.

Titles
In 1990-2000, Pirimkul Kadirov worked as the chairman and deputy chairman of the Science, Education and Culture Committee of the Oliy Majlis of the Republic of Uzbekistan. In 1988, Pirimkul Kadirov was awarded the title of "National Writer of Uzbekistan", and in 1998, the Order of "Respect of the Country".

Novels

 * P. Kodirov „Starry nights“. 1977-1979.
 * P. Kodirov „The Offsprings' pass“. 1989.
 * P. Kodirov „Mother Falcon's Farewell“. 2001.