Book details

Looking at Women Looking at War

A War and Justice Diary

Author: Victoria Amelina

Looking at Women Looking at War

Looking at Women Looking at War

$29.00

About This Book

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,...

Page Count
304
On Sale
02/18/2025

Book Details

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. Whena 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.

Imprint Publisher

St. Martin's Press

ISBN

9781250367686

In The News

Praise for Victoria Amelina

"Victoria’s moral clarity, determination, and love of country impressed me greatly. She now joins the ranks of those whose lives have been cut short by war, their truncated careers the source of what-if musings forever afterward. In Victoria’s case, I feel certain that her legacy, and her words, will endure, infusing a contemporary, combustive element to the Ukrainians’ growing sense of identity and nationhood." Jon Lee Anderson, The New Yorker

“Victoria Amelina had a way of walking straight into your heart and making herself at home there.” —Lia Mills, The Dublin Review of Books

"What impressed me was [Amelia's] seeming ability to gaze steadily into the abyss and not fall into despair, perhaps because she possessed a marvelous sense of humor." —Christopher Merrill, author of Only the Nails Remain: Scenes from the Balkan Wars

"Amelina touched so many of us with her profound capacity for empathy and observation... For its great courage and significance, her difficult work in this realm brings to my mind the acts of resistance figures like Jan Karski and Witold Pilecki, who similarly took great risks to collect and convey information about Nazi German crimes to the Western Allies during the Second World War.” —Peter Balakian, author of Black Dog of Fate

"Victoria has completed her worldly task, leaving us the legacy of her example: of grace under pressure, as Hemingway defined courage, and of the abiding importance of her mission." —Askold Melnyczuk, award-winning author of The Man Who Would Not Bow

"[Victoria] has taught me that being a writer extends well beyond one’s ability to craft words and sentences, that sometimes it involves risking your life to make sure someone else’s story doesn’t go undocumented, speaking out even when it feels like fewer and fewer people are listening." —Yevheniya Dubrova

"A great and very brave colleague." —Héctor Abad Faciolince, Colombian novelist, essayist, journalist, and editor

About the Creators

Looking at Women Looking at War

Looking at Women Looking at War

$29.00