Destined to be a classic, a poet’s powerful look at the courage of resistance
When Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022, Victoria Amelina was busy writing a novel, taking part in the country’s literary scene, and parenting her son. Now she became someone new: a war crimes researcher and the chronicler of extraordinary women like herself who joined the resistance. These heroines include Evgenia, a prominent lawyer turned soldier, Oleksandra, who documented tens of thousands of war crimes and won a Nobel Peace Prize in 2022, and Yulia, a librarian who helped uncover the abduction and murder of a children’s book author.
Everyone in Ukraine knew that Amelina was documenting the war. She photographed the ruins of schools and cultural centers; she recorded the testimonies of survivors and eyewitnesses to atrocities. And she slowly turned back into a storyteller, writing what would become this book.
On the evening of June 27th, 2023, Amelina and three international writers stopped for dinner in the embattled Donetsk region. When a Russian cruise missile hit the restaurant, Amelina suffered grievous head injuries, and lost consciousness. She died on July 1st. She was thirty-seven. She left behind an incredible account of the ravages of war and the cost of resistance. Honest, intimate, and wry, this book will be celebrated as a classic.
Viktoriia Yuriivna Amelina (Ukrainian: Вікторія Юріївна Амеліна), later known as Victoria Amelina, was a Ukrainian novelist. She was the author of two novels and a children's book, a winner of the Joseph Conrad Literary Award and a European Union Prize for Literature finalist.
Viktoriia Yuriivna Amelina was born in Lviv on 1 January 1986. She emigrated to Canada with her family at the age of fourteen, then returned to Ukraine soon after. After completing a degree in computer science in Lviv, Amelina started her career in IT before becoming a full-time writer and poet in 2015.
From 2015, when her first book Синдром листопаду, або Homo Compatiens (The Fall Syndrome: about Homo Compatiens) was published, she dedicated her time solely to writing. Her debut novel deals with the events at Maidan in 2014; the foreword was written by Yurii Izdryk. The novel has received several literary awards, and was welcomed by critics and scholars from Ukraine and wider Europe.
In 2016, Amelina published a book for children called Хтось, або водяне серце (Somebody, or Water Heart).
In 2017, she published a novel Дім для Дома (Dom's Dream Kingdom) about a family of a Soviet colonel who in the 1990s lived in the former childhood apartment in Lviv of the Polish Jewish author Stanisław Lem. The novel was short-listed for the LitAkcent literary award in 2017. and European Union Prize for Literature in 2019.
Amelina was a member of PEN International. In 2018, she took part in 84th World PEN Congress in India as a delegate from Ukraine and gave a speech on Ukrainian filmmaker and political prisoner in Russia Oleg Sentsov.
In 2022, she started writing poetry as well.[11] Her prose and poems have been translated into numerous other languages.
After the Russian invasion of Ukraine started, she worked as a war crimes researcher. In September 2022, while doing research in the Izium region, she uncovered the war diary of fellow Ukrainian writer Volodymyr Vakulenko, who had been killed by the occupying forces.
As of 2022, Amelina lived in Kyiv. On 27 June 2023, she was injured during the Russian attack on Kramatorsk while she was dining at RIA Pizza together with Héctor Abad, Sergio Jaramillo and Catalina Gómez. The restaurant was hit by an Iskander missile. Amelina died due to her injuries on 1 July at the Mechnikov Hospital in Dnipro at the age of 37.
I have never read anything like this before - a book that was 60% finished when the author was killed at the age of 37 by a Russian missile while relaxing in a pizzeria. Her book was published in its incomplete form.
Victoria Amelina’s book documents the reality of the Russian-Ukrainian war while introducing us to the everyday women who courageously joined the resistance.
Victoria’s love of her country and its people is felt through her words. She captures both the best and worst of humanity as she shares the raw reality of war. I felt drawn to the book, despite its emotional and sometimes heavy content.
“We hope that as you hold this document in your hands, you now understand the meaning of the empty pages in it. This book is not only a work of literature, but a testimony to the awful crimes that Russia has been committing against Ukrainian culture and people for centuries. This book also bears witness to that emptiness that we have been feeling ever since Victoria has been gone, and which can never be filled.” Afterword: Empty Pages
Scheduled for publication February 18, 2025
Thank you to St Martin’s Press for an advance copy of this book.
What will be left after us when we are gone? And I mean not the immaterial legacy, not the lasting impact on others, but the lived mess of our everyday lives, which made sense to us in its dynamism, but once the human organizing principle is gone, becomes just that - a bunch of stray objects and notes. This is probably familiar to anyone who has had to sort through the belongings of a deceased relative. I have heard from many women in Ukraine that they have started to put on nicer underwear when they go to sleep. Because if there's shelling at night and the building collapses on them, they don't want to be in old underwear with holes in it when the emergency services find their cold bodies days later. When I went back to Ukraine to do some research for the first time since the full-scale invasion, I texted a professor at my US university, who had become a good friend during my Ph.D., and got her to promise that she would make sure my manuscript was published if anything happened to me.
The book is not about any of these things, but these are all things I couldn't get out of my head while reading it. By its very form - and this would be discussed as a wonderful literary device if it were done in a fictional book - but in this case, completely unintentionally, the book is an epitome of the fragility and precariousness of human life in war.
Victoria Amelina was a prominent Ukrainian writer who published for both adults and children. With russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, she realized that the old ways of being a useful member of society were now worth nothing - and after first joining the volunteer effort in other capacities, she trained as a war crimes investigator and participated in missions to recently liberated regions to document war crimes committed there during the occupation. And then she decided to write a book about all these experiences - part diary, part reportage, part memoir, focusing on her own experience as a war crimes investigator, but also highlighting the stories of other women.
This book is the best attempt to reconstruct Victoria's plan based on the last working draft that existed when she was killed by a russian missile in 2023.
It's got it all: fully fleshed out chapters; brief notes from interviews; sections identified only by what they were supposed to be about; excerpts from mission reports; quotes from historical sources she pulled to show some parallels with current events; sections that adhered to a previous organizing principle for the book that was superseded by the current structure. As I said, if we saw this in a fiction book, we would applaud it as a clever postmodern device. Instead, this is just a snippet of a work-in-progress that tragically lost its source of meaning, its human creator, halfway through.
One of the central themes of the book is how Victoria found the diary of Volodymyr Vakulenko, a children's author who was killed when his village was occupied, but who managed to hide his diary, which describes the first month of the full-scale invasion, by burying it in his garden. Amelina dug it out with her hands, then took it to a museum and presented it to the public when it was published. So you can't help but get the feeling of "mise-en-abyme" as you read it: the story of a diary that was abruptly cut short because its author's life was taken by the aggressor and reconstructed for public view by others appears in another diary that... well, had exactly the same fate.
I highly recommend this title. If you don't feel like reading into notes that only made sense to the person who jotted them down, I strongly recommend reading at least the completed sections (which is all of Part 1 and many chapters throughout the book) and flipping through the rest. Victoria has done a great job of making the subject accessible to an international audience, and where she didn't have enough time, the editors have provided explanations in the footnotes.
Publication date February 18, 2025.
I am grateful to St. Martin's Press for providing me with an eARC through NetGalley ahead of the publication. The opinion above is my own.
Thanks to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for access to this title. All opinions expressed are my own.
It was the title that seduced me to hit the request button. More than likely, it will be the picture of the woman on the front cover and what was written on the pages that will stick with me forever.
Ukraine, 2022 is marked by war with Russia, a war that has been ongoing since 2014 and the lives of Victoria Amelina, her family, her neighbours and all of her country are forever changed. It isn't the first time Ukraine has found itself invaded by its giant of a neighbour. Time and time again, the book refers to the many offences Ukraine has suffered in its history. Once a children's writer, Victoria Amelina feels she needs a new purpose and will become a war crimes journalist. She introduces us to many of the women who have forever been changed by this conflict. Amelina herself died tragically while out in the field, but her editors felt that her unfinished manuscript needed to be sent out to the world.
Frankly, I am glad that they did. Because it is the eyewitness accounts of women who were mothers, daughters, artists, etc, that we need to remember. As is mentioned in the book, "Why do we say more the names of the perpetrators than the people they have terrorized? " These heroines include Evgenia, a prominent lawyer turned soldier, Oleksandra, who documented tens of thousands of war crimes and won a Nobel Peace Prize in 2022, and Yulia, a librarian who helped uncover the abduction and murder of a children’s book author.
About the Author On the evening of June 27th, 2023, Amelina and three international writers stopped for dinner in the embattled Donetsk region. When a Russian cruise missile hit the restaurant, Amelina suffered grievous head injuries and lost consciousness. She died on July 1st. She was thirty-seven.
Expected Publication Date 18/02/25 Goodreads Review Date 16/02/25
I was attracted to the title of this one. After reading some of the front material, I'm looking forward to the untraditional form and the translation challenge this manuscript represents. I have very mixed feelings about posthumous publishing. On one hand, it makes sense to honor the incomplete work of a writer's oeuvre at the time of their death. At the same time, plumbing an author's rejects for publishing opportunities gets morally murky. Since this is the first of these, I expect to enjoy it quite a lot.
Final Review
“Guys, you’re packed as if . . . as if you were going to war!” I am not sure whether her laugh was hysterical or ironic. Perhaps it was both. I laughed too. p54
Review summary and recommendations
Victoria Amelina died while reporting on the war in Ukraine. Stories told while the writer dies often carry significant social and political weight. In a just world, this book would be perceived as too heavy to carry, but we'd carry it anyway. I hope it gets the attention it deserves. Needs, even.
I recommend listening to this one for readers who have trouble with violent material but want to read this courageous journalist's final words about war. It gives just a bit of cushion between reader and material.
I also recommend this book to readers who enjoy reading about politics and policies, survival stories, or those who would find value in the bleak look at life during wartime.
I needed some time to understand how I felt. There was no time for that. p161
Reading Notes
Three (or more) things I loved:
1. Many religions have a figure that we may call the Recording Angel— the spirit whose job it is to write down the good and bad deeds of humans. These records are then used by a deity to achieve redress— to balance the scales that the goddess Justice is so often shown as carrying. War crimes are by definition bad deeds. p4 I think Margaret Atwood's forward reveals a lot about the origins of this manuscript. It also addresses the necessity of completing Amelina's final project.
2. A powerful opening to an essential book: I have just bought my first gun in downtown Lviv. I’ve heard that everyone is capable of killing, and those who say they aren’t just haven’t met the right person yet. An armed stranger entering my country might just be the “right person.”
3. This narrative is naturally tense and riveting. Amelina's narrative voice is fraught with anxiety. I went through the first 40 pages without breathing.
4.“He said, choose me or the dress,” she laughs, remembering. Vira chose her freedom and the dress. She loves her dresses, but she couldn’t evacuate them in March either. She became the girl in jeans and a red sweater, trying to survive, no Kapuściński. p154 The author writes so intuitively about a truly uncanny experience-- shedding one's identity in layers while running from war.
5. It is through elegant imagery that Amelina shows the reader the absolute destruction that is war. And wouldn’t that be wonderful, to meet in Paris and not talk to her about the thirty-seven wars and three genocides she has seen, but only talk about art and beauty? I try to imagine this happy time while walking the Paris streets with Oleksandra. p238
6. Amelina writes extensively about how war destroys personal identity and local culture. For some reason, this makes me most sad. That even the survivors of war die on the inside.
Three (or less) things I didn't love:
This section isn't only for criticisms. It's merely for items that I felt something for other than "love" or some interpretation thereof.
1. The story Amelina tells about why she doesn't panic when she hears explosions in a war zone is completely wild!
2. This is a harrowing account. TW war, war crimes, SA, torture. “He has no major visible injuries, so he can be sent back into battle,” she cries on the phone. “His fingers are broken, so how will he shoot? How will he dig quickly enough?” I know what she means. Everyone who has been to the front line or has friends there knows the main rule for survival: if you want to live, dig. p254 The last 20-30 pages before the epilogue are especially intense.
3. The Russian war has created a minefield of 250,000 i square kilometers in Ukraine; demining could take decades. p270 This just blows my mind.
Rating: 🛡🛡🛡🛡🛡 /5 dangers of war Recommend? yes! Finished: Feb 14 '25 Format: digital arc, NetGalley Read this book if you like: 🪦 posthumous publications 👨💻 journalism 👨🔬 activism 📓 nonfiction 🩸 wartime stories
Thank you to the author Victoria Amelina, publishers St. Martin's Press, and NetGalley for an accessible advance digital copy of LOOKING AT WOMEN LOOKING AT WAR. All views are mine. ---------------
Victoria was living rhe dream until her country was being attacked. She decided to document the woman she saw during the war. This was an emotional read.
Looking at Women Looking At War is written by a Ukrainian novelist, Victoria Amelina, who, after the Russian full-scale invasion, joined the war crime research team to document war crimes committed by Russian forces. Victoria and her team traveled throughout Ukraine to the frontline and newly liberated towns and villages to collect testimonies about torture, rape, kidnappings, executions, bombings of civilian infrastructure, and destruction of Ukrainian cultural heritage, all committed by Russians.
Victoria Amelina chose to structure the book around the stories of women and the new roles many were forced to take on during the war: a lawyer who enlists in the army, a writer who becomes a war crime researcher, ordinary women, who come together to organize supplies for Ukrainian soldiers or help evacuate refugees from occupied territories. Victoria was not able to finish her book because she, herself, became a victim of a war crime. She was gravely injured and passed away as a result, following the Russian bombing of a cafe in the city of Kramatorsk.
Victoria was murdered by Russians, but her voice was not silenced and her book was published posthumously. Some chapters are finished and some only have fragments, ideas, and unfinished sentences that Victoria didn't have a chance to develop. When you read the book and come across unfinished sentences, it really hits you that the reason they are unfinished is because the author was killed. Looking at Women Looking at War is not an easy read, because of the horrors described in the book and the unfinished structure, but it is such an important read! I am very grateful that her US publisher, St. Martin's Press, proceeded with the publication. Looking at Women Looking at War is a powerful, moving war-time diary and a must-read.
An inside look at the Ukraine, Russian war from the perspective of a Ukrainian woman documenting war crimes. She was killed before she got to finish the book so it reads somewhat piece meal. However, it was very informative and a powerful read.
Thank you to St. Martins Press for the complimentary copy.
Victoria Amelina's "Looking at Women Looking at War: A War and Justice Diary" is a profound testament to the resilience and courage of Ukrainian women amid the harrowing backdrop of the 2022 Russian invasion. This book follows the author's personal transformation since the start of the war through the compelling narratives of women who transitioned from civilian roles to frontline defenders and justice seekers.
Her diary introduces readers to figures like Evgenia and Evhenia; both lawyers turned soldiers - told to "Aim at everything that shines," and Oleksandra, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate who meticulously documented war crimes. She lists names, dates, and detailed accounts of the unlawful detention and imprisonment of civilians and those who experienced inhuman detention conditions, torture, and even murder by Russian soldiers.
Amelina's authentic writing captures these women's emotional and psychological landscapes, offering an intimate portrayal of their strength, bravery, and vulnerability. It can be very difficult to read at times. Still, I found certain aspects of this book fascinating, such as her detailed notes on the extensive training Victoria went through in researching and interviewing victims of torture (without causing more torture and pain), war crimes, victims of war crimes, and more.
The author's own journey—from a writer and mother to a war crimes researcher and investigator—is poignantly detailed, reflecting the broader metamorphosis experienced by many Ukrainians during the conflict who became soldiers overnight. Her commitment to documenting atrocities and preserving cultural heritage, even at great personal risk, underscores the diary's authenticity and urgency.
Victoria shares her personal stories of growing up in an environment that is familiar with the sounds of bombing, but it's different when you're now trying to save lives and keep her own son safe. Upon returning to the apartment she shares with her son and dog to take what they need to evacuate, she's afraid to go inside, thinking, "During the following months of this war, could I tell the displaced children to please not touch his Lego creations? They can take anything they need, play with his toys, read his books, and sleep on his bed, but they can't touch his constructions; they took so much time to build."
The distance of this war can make it hard to imagine until you're reading her words, and the connections make it feel so real. Amelina also shares stories of her brother-in-law being deployed to the front lines and the emotions involved in evacuating his family and her parents. She's also a part of numerous other searches and evacuations. In each search, Victoria collects diaries and any documentation that will continue someone's legacy or provide proof of the atrocities she has seen. As she transitions more into a non-fiction writer, Victoria shares in her diary how she would like to write a book based on the stories of those who are documenting war crimes with the intent of holding criminals accountable.
I wasn't quite prepared for this up close and personal look at the disturbing reality of this war while also experiencing the extraordinary strength of not only the women she's writing about but just the mere fact that this is Amelina's "unfinished" diary - as her life cut short in a missal attack in June 2023. I kept asking myself, could I be as strong as the women in this book? I want to think so.
I hope her family finds strength that her legacy endures through this vital historical record and tribute to the women who confront oppression with unwavering resolve. Their enduring bravery and power of resistance were so incredibly inspiring.
I love that they left her diary intact and did not try to fill in the blanks, embellish it, or assume what Victoria was trying to share.
Many of her diary entries stood out to me, but this one really lingered: "I imagined that one day I would join the army too. But it appears it is so hard to dig, and how would I dig a trench then? Everyone knows that digging, not shooting or anything else that is romantic, is, in fact, the most crucial skill to survive. If you want to live, dig, they say on the frontline."
Maybe her way of joining the army was to document, research, interview, and evacuate others. And she did it well.
It is scheduled for publication on February 18, 2025
Thank you, #NetGalley, #VictoriaAmelina, and #StMartinsPress, for the ARC in exchange for my honest opinion of #LookingatWomenLookingatWar.
Perhaps the most important book you will read all year.
Slated to be released on February 18, a mere six days before the three-year anniversary of Russia‘s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and in the middle of peace talks that Ukraine is not part of, „Looking at Women Looking at War“ is one woman’s timely and urgent yet incredibly poetic legacy, a collection of stories of Ukrainian women documenting war crimes.
The author, Ukrainian novelist, poet, and literary festival founder turned war crimes researcher Victoria Amelina (1986-2023), was killed by a Russian missile strike against a civilian target, eventually succumbing to her injuries on July 1, 2023. At the time of her death, only 60 percent of this book - her only work of non-fiction, written in English to reach the widest possible audience - was finished. A team of editors did a marvelous job of compiling different drafts of Victoria‘s manuscript into one harrowing account of war while not shying away from leaving numerous of its later chapters empty, sentences and whole accounts unfinished, thoughts not verbalized - some of the book only a fragment, unfinished, much like the life of its author.
What remains is a unique and harrowing collection of diary entries, stories derived from countless interviews and Victoria Amelina‘s own investigations and experiences, research reports, interviews, poetry, and, above all, the author‘s poetic prose that has the reader looking at the these women up close and through them gaining an intimate view of the war while always being keenly aware of the tragic loss of this incredibly talented author.
„Looking at Women Looking at War“ is unflinching in its honesty of the brutalities of war, yet never without hope or determination. Perhaps one of the most important books you will read this year.
Many thanks to NetGalley and St. Martin‘s Press for the honor of reading Victoria Amelina‘s war and justice diary before its release on February 18, 2025. All opinions are my own.
Looking at War, Looking at Women is a timely story where the author is writing about the Ukraine war and then tragically is killed before her book is published. It was very difficult and emotional to read about the ugliness of war.
“On the evening of June 27th, 2023, Amelina and three international writers stopped for dinner in the embattled Donetsk region. When a Russian cruise middle hit the restaurant, Amelina suffered grievous head injuries, and lost consciousness. She died on July 1st. She was thirty-seven. She left behind this incredible account of the ravages of war and the cost of resistance…it will a lasting impact.”
I received a physical copy from publisher St. Martens Press. Thank you for my gifted copy and the opportunity to preview this book!
This book is timely with Ukraine battling the hostile war against Russia. Victoria Amelina, author of four books, stopped what she was doing to document the struggles of those affected by the severe conditions.
Sadly, on July 1, 2023, her life at 37 ended with a missile that injured 64 people. She died before her war manuscript was completed. However, with some edits, her document is now able to reach a large audience with the harsh truth of what has been happening behind the lines.
This book conveys just how horrible life has been for those scrambling to survive. It reveals how some have evacuated, starved, been captured, beaten and died. It’s a grim picture of what they have endured with fear, pain, hate and torture on their minds and bodies.
In Ukraine, one person said, “My neighbors lost everything but I still have my books.” This puts everything in perspective with what possessions have meaning. They are now in a country with destroyed bridges, museums, libraries, hospitals and a shortage of medical workers.
It’s not an easy book to digest knowing that so many are in the midst of an escapable dire situation. There’s not a phone line where they can ask for help. Ukrainians can stock up on food supplies, water and a generator yet, they know they can still get killed from explosions.
Margaret Atwood’s short introductory gives readers the candid truth of the harsh reality that the Russians have placed on the Ukrainians. It’s an important book and it ends with a meaningful poem. Victoria Amelina said, “Whenever a writer is still being read, it means they are still alive.”
My thanks to St. Martin’s Press and NetGalley for allowing me to read an advanced copy of this book with an expected release date of February 18, 2025.
Heart-wrenching in the way it forces us to grapple with the fundamental questions of good and evil, the meaning of human suffering, and what we leave behind when we die. Whenever a sentence cuts off mid-thought or an idea remains undeveloped, it creates a sick feeling in the stomach—a stark reminder that Amelina was living this horror. It tore her from the page, and she won’t be here to finish the sentence or the thought.
No, what she leaves behind is imperfect, unfinished, raw—but it is hers. True to what she saw, true to her principles, true to her purpose of documenting the horror around her with clarity and without dramatics. The tiny vignettes of real women, living through a real war, remind us that no one escapes the reach of violence. And yet, there is often a role for everyone to play in the defense of a country, whether on the frontlines or in the evacuation of a literary museum.
Though this book is extremely untraditional— and as such, ought not really be read the way most nonfiction books are typically read— the unorganized and underdeveloped elements are what really illuminate this sense that meaning, narrative and organization are often imbued after the fact, even in a diary-style piece. Violence and occupation are right here, right now.
There is also an extremely intellectually stimulating conversation with Phillipe Sands in the middle that focuses on the practical issues with the ICJ and ICC, as well as a more theoretical discussion about the term ‘genocide.’ I thought Amelina’s idea that genocide is a word that has fallen victim to doublethink was absolutely gripping, and I’m still thinking about it now. Sands point is absolutely true— the word stands apart from the term ‘crime against humanity’ or ‘war crime’ in the non-technical, brutal imagery it forces upon the reader.
Victoria Amelia was writing a novel when Russia invaded Ukraine on February 2022. She became a war crimes researcher and the chronicler of women like herself who joined de resistance. The heroines in this book are a prominent lawyer Evgenia, Yulia a librarian and Olexsandra a Nobel Peace prize winner. Amelia was documenting the war, photographed ruins and recorded testimonies….till June 27th when a Russian cruise missile hit the restaurant where she had stopped for a bite…she died on July 1st at thirty seven….she left behind her unedited notes.
Written by a poet, this book is also a work of literature but foremost a powerful look at courage of resistance.
The first section of her diary was completed before her death and the second section consist of unfinished notes and paragraphs. The second part is very fragmented and very distracting to a point I skipped some passages. Having said this, it doesn’t remove that Amelia was one of Ukraine’s most celebrated young writers and her dairy is very honest and intimate.
It is a difficult read, poignantly detailed on the experiences by many Ukrainians and the atrocities suffered by the population during the conflict, Ms. Amelina brigs us up close to the reality of war.
Most reviewers loved this book well I am an exception for my part I stand on the fence still trying to evaluate my feelings. Not loving it yet not disliking it.
I received this ARC from St- Martin Press via Netgalley for my thoughts: this is the way I see it..
Looking at Women Looking at War is a profound record of the strength and resilience of the Ukranian people, captured by a remarkable writer.
When Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Amelina wanted to use her skills as an author to help in the war effort. She volunteered as a war crimes reporter, and this book records the testimonies of the victims, witnesses and fellow reporters she met across the country in 2022-23, before her reporting was tragically cut short by her death in a missile strike.
Amelina's writing is brave, emotive and honest. To her (and to the reader), recording these testimonies is an act of justice and of love; the truth has a power in its own right. As well as the personal stories, there are some powerful reflections on the threads running between Holodomor, the Sixtiers, the Revolution of Dignity and the present war. I particularly enjoyed the transcript of her conversation with Philippe Sands, a thoughtful and indepth discussion of the meaning of genocide and the search for justice.
Although the text is unfinished, and it's not always an easy read, I admired the editors' decision to present what there is in draft form, true to Amelina's vision. Her personality and passion sings from the page, and I'm grateful that the world gets to share in her gift.
An intelligent and intimate record of war, Looking at Women Looking at War is an important read.
*Thank you to Netgalley for the arc in exchange for an honest review*
I won a prepublication copy of this book through Goodreads and St. Martin’s Press and am thankful for the opportunity to have read it. The author, Victoria Amelina, was documenting the war crimes by Russia in Ukraine when she was killed by a missile in July 2023 before completing this book. As a result, and as other reviewers have commented, the book is rather piecemeal and includes notes and even unfinished written thoughts.
I found it an interesting yet challenging read as I did not expect to be so deeply moved by the book. Having said this, I would highly recommend “Looking at Women Looking at War”. Victoria Amelina provided some history of the relationship between Russia and Ukraine prior to the February 2022 invasion which gave context to the need for Ukraine to fight for their people and culture. The bravery, determination and sacrifices of the women highlighted in the book is truly remarkable.
Looking at Women Looking at War by Victoria Amelina is a book with a fascinating premise. The book is the journal of a Ukrainian writer cover her own experiences of the Russian invasion as well as the experiences of other female writers involved in various types of resistance. The brave women described in this book venture into battle zones to record and document war crimes. I learned a lot about these remarkable women and the horrific realities of life in Ukraine.
The author of the book was killed and this book is incomplete. The first part of the book is fully written. However, as the book continues there are many sections of raw notes. This book is a true example of a primary document which is of great value. The editors of the book do a very nice job pulling together journal entries and placing them into a logical order. Nonetheless, the fragmented second half of the book is challenging to follow due to the very short passages.
I recommend this book as an outstanding example of a primary source but readers should know that it does not read like a complete story due to the tragic death of the author.
Thank you to St. Martin's Press and NetGalley for an advanced reader copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
Honest review for the ARC I received. Thank you! This was a really amazing read. She spoke of the things that happened with the Russian Invasion of Ukraine. She shared stories and photos of this horrific event. She really was able to make words flow beautifully and allowed the reader to feel and think of the people she was talking to. The book was never finished because she was killed by a Russian missile.
Viktoria Amelinas bok var till 60% färdig när hon dog i en rysk missilattack 2023. I boken söker hon efter motståndets röster samtidigt som hon visar på ryssarnas brutalitet i kriget likväl som tidigare under historien. En viktig bok där de gråmarkerade, ofullständiga meningarna förstärker bokens syfte - att visa upp de ryska krigsbrotten.
”ibland när flyglarmen ljuder, går jag ut på balkongen och ser luftvärnsrakterna stiga mot den svarta himlen över stadens silhuett. Jag behöver inte övervinna någon rädsla; jag har helt enkelt slutat vara rädd för döden. Jag föreställer mig till och med hur alla kvinnor jag skriver om till slut kommer att samlas på min begravning: de är alla upptagna med att kämpa för rättvisa, så det krävs nog en sådan händelse för att det ska ske. Men sedan påminner jag mig själv om att jag fortfarande måste avsluta den här boken, se min son växa upp och kanske till och med ta värvning i armén om några år. Så jag vänder mig bort från den magnifika, men farliga utsikten och återgår till skrivandet.”
This posthumous book from Victoria Amelina is multilayered. It’s the story of one woman’s journey from writer to war crimes researcher, the story of other women dealing with Russia’s illegal war against Ukraine, and the story of Russia’s historical crimes/genocide against the Ukrainian people. It’s interesting and insightful and all the more poignant for the tragic death of Amelina in July 2023, one of the victims of a Russian missile attack on a pizzeria. The world was deprived of her talent, but we can still hear her voice. As she wrote about a martyred fellow writer, “…whenever a writer is still being read, it means they are still alive.” So, read the book.
So I learned a TON about Ukraine 🇺🇦 history and the atrocities done to them by Russia. The way the author shares the information w her personal touches makes it more of a story than a history lesson. I never liked history because of how it was taught. If there were more first hand accounts instead of a history book I probably would have went that direction for teaching. But right now I am enjoying learning and being truly disgusted by those that are “in charge.” Our own orange clown included.
I’m giving this book 5 stars for the unbelievable courage it took for the author to report on war crimes. She literally risked everything, including her life to let the world know how depraved the actions are of those (Russians in this case) during wartime. I listened to this as an audiobook & I would highly recommend not doing so. The names & places were so unfamiliar to me that it became very confusing at times.
A must read for those who want to understand some of the recent war crimes against Ukraine and its people by Russia. This diary also relates the Russian aggression through the last century. Difficult subject matter related in a manner that is easily accessible. Some truly beautiful moments amid the horror and sadness of war. Written and complied by a woman who gave everything.
It's not an easy read. It's a vital real read. What she wrote is important and I hope her, and others, testimony can be used in law against the aggressors.
Jag saknar ord. Mitt hjärta är också så nedtyngd av sorg att jag faktiskt inte vet hur jag ska kunna återhämta mig. Vad lever vi i för värld egentligen?
This was a heartbreaking and powerful read. Victoria Amelina was an author and mother, who decided she must become a war crimes journalist to document what was going on in Ukraine. The book documents her experience with war, and that of many other women bravely enduring the unimaginable. The first half of the book feels finished and was a compelling read, but the second part is very fragmented and unfinished, as the author tragically died in the middle of writing this story. Some might wonder why it was published if it was unfinished, but I thought there was great power and weight lent to the book by highlighting how war leaves things unfinished, destroyed and fragmented. A very powerful read, and amazing primary source for the world to have. I received an ARC, and this is my honest review.
I received an ARC of this book. This was a tough but amazing read. a slow read too so you can take it all in. It is about the war in Ukraine and women involved in documenting war crimes by the Russians. There is more to the book than that and I highly recommend it. The editors did a wonderful job of putting it together. It is a great tribute to Victoria Amelina. She would have been proud. RIP Victoria.
Phenomenal! Must read - heart breaking snippets of war in Ukraine and the women (and men) witnessing the war crimes, the bravery and the destruction of a people and a culture and cities -
This was a difficult and harrowing read, Victoria was a poet and writer before the Russian invasion, after she joined up with a team to document and interview people to bring justice to the Ukrainians who have been tortured, murdered and assaulted. My review will not do this justice, but this is going to be a new classic. Sadly her life was cut short when she was killed in a middle attack in June 2023 leaving her 11 year old son without a mother, with this manuscript about 60% complete.
This documents the lives of women, and their families during the invasion from February 2022 until her death. It also documents the cultural heritage lost, the identity of the Ukrainians under threat and being bombed from existence and the history of Ukraine's relations with Russia and the Society Union. Parts of this book are educating people how Ukraine has come to be and the injustices that Ukrainians have experienced over the years since independence and before. This was a harrowing read, but it is one that needs to read to give anyone a small inkling of what has been going on for the people for Ukraine and how their lives have been damaged and wiped out.
Thanks to @wmcollinsbooks for sending an early copy of this my way. It's being released in February 2025 so make sure you go and preorder a copy and add it to your reading list.