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In Wartime: Stories from Ukraine Hardcover – 1 Dec 2015

4.3 out of 5 stars 12 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Allen Lane (1 Dec. 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0241198828
  • ISBN-13: 978-0241198827
  • Product Dimensions: 16 x 2.3 x 24.1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 527,410 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

Haunting . . . timely . . . Judah concentrates skilfully and affectingly on the human cost of manoeuvres in Ukraine. He seldom makes his own thoughts and opinions seem intrusive, instead letting his eloquent and compassionate subjects give a far greater insight into the horror and privations (Alexander Larman Observer)

Tim Judah has got a lot closer to the war in eastern Ukraine than most western reporters - close enough to be able to convey vividly to readers the smells and sounds . . . His experience of the Balkan Wars of the 1990s helped Judah spot this war as it mutated from malignant propaganda into blood-spattered reality. As a reporter, he excels at letting the Ukrainians themselves do the talking. (Niall Ferguson)

The strength of Judah's In Wartime lies in the depth, range and balance of his reportage and his eye for telling details. (Tony Barber Financial Times)

Tim Judah . . . does not tell us what to think about war but instead teaches us how: with courage, humility, attention to human detail, and admirable historical intuition. (Timothy Snyder)

Visceral, gripping, heart-breaking and often shocking, based on interviews with witnesses and victims on the ground, In Wartime is both astute political analysis and vivid war reportage of what's really happening in the dirty war in Ukraine by a veteran observer of the Balkan wars who truly understands the complexities and nuances (Simon Sebag Montefiore)

A compelling and acute piece of contemporary reportage (David Edgar London Review of Books)

Judah has carved out a reputation as one of Europe's best writers on the Balkans. His job description should be something like History Wars Correspondent . . . comes close to the master, Ryszard Kapuscinski (Roger Boyes Times)

Vibrant . . . the multitude of ordinary voices makes for a chorus of discontent and hope. (Serhy Yekelchyk Times Literary Supplement)

A kaleidoscopic portrait . . . Judah Looks at the present - what Ukraine looks and feels like now. He criss-crosses the country from the Russian-speaking east to the Ukrainian-speaking west. (Marcus Tanner Independent)

A timely account . . . a vivid human portrait (Annabelle Chapman Prospect)

About the Author

Tim Judah has reported on the war in Ukraine for the New York Review of Books and for the Economist, where he is also Balkans correspondent. During his career as a journalist, he has covered many countries and conflicts including the aftermath of communism in Eastern Europe, the Balkan Wars, Afghanistan, Iraq, North Korea, Darfur, Haiti and Uganda. He is the author of Kosovo: War and Revenge The Serbs: History, Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia and Bikila: Ethiopia's Barefoot Olympian.


Customer Reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
From detailed intensive interviews with a wide range of people across an extensive geographical coverage, Tim Judah creates a panoramic portrait of Ukraine. He shows its immense diversity of ethnicity and opinion. Lvov and the west were oppressed by Polish occupation, Nazi invasion, and Soviet rule. Donetsk and the east emerged from Welshman John Hughes’s 1869 establishment of the New Russia Company in the town of Hughesovka, later to become Stalino, and mass Russian immigration to establish its mining and machinery industries. There seems to be no core Ukrainian identity, which may explain the opportunistic functional nature of Ukrainian society with its pervasive corruption. Judah’s account is absorbing, but partial, since even a large number of individual views remains subjective and anecdotal. A debate on a synthesis of Judah’s account would offer further insight.
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Format: Hardcover
As one of the most experienced lawyers in the UK at dealing with Ukraine, I thought I knew the country quite well, but this book made me realise that what I really know is just the westward-looking, educated elite. Schoolteachers in Sloviansk and Stalinists in Donetsk are an unknown quantity to me, but not to Tim Judah. Despite his avowed aim of not setting out to write a history or political analysis, his approach of telling the story of present day Ukraine through the people he met there probably revealed more about Ukraine's current position and likely future than any political or strategic book designed to achieve exactly that aim ever could. From that perspective the book is a success, and a surprisingly gripping one at that.
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Format: Hardcover
Tim Judah travelled extensively in Ukraine in 2014 and 2015 and talked to individuals in all sectors of society, covering the whole of the country from Lviv and Odessa in the west to Donetsk and Luhansk in the rebel-held east. His interlocutors describe their personal narratives of Ukraine’s past and of the current internal conflicts and lack of mutual comprehension. The account is vivid and gripping, and gives the reader an understanding of the diversity of Ukraine, and why it has made so little economic and social progress since independence in 1991.

Tim has taken trouble to meet ordinary people (young and old) as well as politicians, businessmen and disparate paramilitary groups. He is balanced and objective in describing the many ways in which Ukraine remains dysfunctional and has failed to build on its potential. At the same time, he brings out the blinkered and destructive motivation of the separatists in the east, and leaves the reader in no doubt about the manipulative and self-serving aims of the Kremlin in supporting the rebels.

Wartime is enormously interesting, in part because of Tim’s enthusiasm for researching byways (for instance the chapter on Bessarabia) and the odd and often depressing corners of Ukrainian history from the 1920s onwards. The book is written with clarity and verve - and (above all) with sympathy for a complicated country currently at risk of ending in a cul-de-sac. While Tim’s own views come through, the reader is presented with the facts and left to draw his own conclusions.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Tim Judah paints a vivid picture of the current situation in Ukraine for normal people, about their fears and hopes, through many touching and crisp interviews. It brought the reality of a country in war limbo closer to my daily reality. There's a broad range of portraits of mothers with sons at war, business people desperate to maintain jobs and to protect their life-long work, of ideologically charged separatist leaders under the spell of Soviet nostalgia, and of teachers, factory workers, doctors and old people trying to make ends meet in the rubble of destroied towns. It's journalism about what matters most: the people who carry on despite war and abandonment by their leaders.
It also gives enough historical context and political analysis to understand why the country is strogly divided in pro Russian and pro Western loyalties and why the famous Maidan Revolution hasn't brought real change to the country. I recommend it to anyone who lives in Europe and want to understand what happens at EU's borders.
(I personnaly bought this book for many reasons, not least because a lot of our friends in Germany are Ukrainin Jews who migrated here between 2005-2010 and I wanted to understand more about their old country. We also have many Dutch friends and we were really shocked and saddened with them by the crush of the Malaysia MH17 plane in July 2014. The book made me realise that what happens in Ukraine today touches many Europeans in ways we might not be aware of in the whirlwind of more pressing current issues. After having read it in original, I can only hope that the book gets at least translated in German so i can recommend it to family and friends here.)
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Format: Hardcover
I visited Kiev and the Crimea in Soviet times, and I have been in Kiev more recently. This book took me to many other parts of the country I have never seen, and made them come alive. It pulls no punches in exposing the extent of the corruption in Ukraine, and the abject failure of its post-independence leaders to deliver the honest government its people need. This gloomy narrative is balanced, to some extent, by the author's account of his conversations with dozens of ordinary people, struggling to live 'normal' human lives and sometimes succeeding, against all the odds; but looming over everything is the role of Russia and the 'New Russia' agenda which has already cost so many lives and could yet cost many more. The book tells us that the national anthem begins with the words, 'Ukraine's glory has not yet died'. If Ukraine is to flourish, there is clearly much more to be done.
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