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The Unwomanly Face of War
The Unwomanly Face of War: An Oral History of Women in World War II | Svetlana Alexievich
A long-awaited English translation of the groundbreaking oral history of women in World War II across Europe and Russiafrom the winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature A landmark.Timothy Snyder, author of On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century For more than three decades, Svetlana Alexievich has been the memory and conscience of the twentieth century. When the Swedish Academy awarded her the Nobel Prize, it cited her invention of a new kind of literary genre, describing her work as a history of emotions . . . a history of the soul. In The Unwomanly Face of War, Alexievich chronicles the experiences of the Soviet women who fought on the front lines, on the home front, and in the occupied territories. These womenmore than a million in totalwere nurses and doctors, pilots, tank drivers, machine-gunners, and snipers. They battled alongside men, and yet, after the victory, their efforts and sacrifices were forgotten. Alexievich traveled thousands of miles and visited more than a hundred towns to record these womens stories. Together, this symphony of voices reveals a different aspect of the warthe everyday details of life in combat left out of the official histories. Translated by the renowned Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky, The Unwomanly Face of War is a powerful and poignant account of the central conflict of the twentieth century, a kaleidoscopic portrait of the human side of war. But why? I asked myself more than once. Why, having stood up for and held their own place in a once absolutely male world, have women not stood up for their history? Their words and feelings? They did not believe themselves. A whole world is hidden from us. Their war remains unknown . . . I want to write the history of that war. A womens history.Svetlana Alexievich THE WINNER OF THE NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE for her polyphonic writings, a monument to suffering and courage in our time. Patient in overcoming clich, attentive to the unexpected, and restrained in exposition, her writing reaches those far beyond her own experiences and preoccupations, far beyond her generation, and far beyond the lands of the former Soviet Union.Timothy Snyder, author of On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century Alexievichs artistry has raised oral history to a totally different dimension. It is no wonder that her brilliant obsession with what Vasily Grossman called the brutal truth of war was suppressed for so long by Soviet censors, because her unprecedented pen portraits and interviews reveal the face of war hidden by propaganda.Antony Beevor, author of Stalingrad: The Fateful Siege [Alexievich moves] away from military narrative and [tells] the tales of Soviet women who took on male roles, fought on the front lines, killed and got killed, but still looked at the shattered world around them from a feminine perspective, focusing on human suffering and basic emotions free of any pathos.Newsweek A mighty documentarian and a mighty artist . . . Her books are woven from hundreds of interviews, in a hybrid form of reportage and oral history that has the quality of a documentary film on paper. But Alexievich is anything but a simple recorder and transcriber of found voices; she has a writerly voice of her own which emerges from the chorus she assembles, with great style and authority, and she shapes her investigations of Soviet and post-Soviet life and death into epic dramatic chronicles as universally essential as Greek tragedies.The New Yorker
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archaeolibrarianologist
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booksandsympathy
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For Women's History Month, I'm going to start this audiobook tomorrow. #herstoryathon

jlhammar It‘s a tough read in terms of subject matter, but so good. Great choice! 2y
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review
TheDaysGoBy
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Pickpick

Finally finished this one up. I enjoyed it! In some ways I wonder if it would‘ve been better as an audiobook but it did give a very unique perspective on WWII. Not any kind of retelling of events/layout of what happened but rather oral accounts from various women who served in the military for Russia

Daisey I listened to the audiobook of this, and I think it emphasizes the oral history feel of the writing. Yet, I also found an ebook copy so I could easily check quotes and names as well. 2y
TheDaysGoBy @Daisey Yeah that‘s probably the route I should‘ve taken. Still good though 2y
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jlhammar
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📕 The Unwomanly Face of War by Svetlana Alexievich
🖊 Undset, Sigrid
📺 Unbelievable (Netflix miniseries)
🎤 U2
🎶 Under Pressure - Queen & David Bowie

#ManicMonday #LetterU
@CBee

Bookwomble Queen and David Bowie! 🧐😁 2y
jlhammar @Bookwomble Oh my, how could I omit Bowie?! Unacceptable! I‘ve edited it. Thank you 😊 2y
Bookwomble @jlhammar 😉😆 2y
42 likes3 comments
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literateBee
The Unwomanly Face of War | Svetlana Alexievich

I think everything by Alexievich is essential reading.

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Caroline2
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rockpools I might need to buy that. 4y
Simona @rockpools Yes, you have to! It is a very sad, but insightful and tender look at the part of the Soviet history. 4y
TrishB Just about to post 😁 4y
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squirrelbrain I read this last year - very sad but very good. Definitely buy it @rockpools . 4y
Suet624 Still on my shelf. I so want to get to it. (edited) 4y
Caroline2 @TrishB It‘s become my new compulsion first thing in the morning now...check the kindle daily deals. 😆 🤦‍♀️ 4y
Caroline2 @squirrelbrain yeah, I‘m going to save it for when I‘m in the right mood (which is defo not right now!! 😟) 4y
TrishB I always do with my first cup of tea 😁 4y
Caroline2 @TrishB Glad it‘s not just me!! 😆 4y
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coffees
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Pickpick

This was such a good read, very tragic and informative. Before we get into the accounts of Soviet women, what they did during and after #worldwar2, how they loved and lost, we get some words from the author who dubs herself a historian of the soul. That is what this book feels like. I plan to check out more of her works and learn more of what women went through during these times. The second book I've read that touches on the subject #nonfiction

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coffees
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"Today many people, especially the young, think it was only America that defeated Hitler. Little is known about the price the Soviet people paid for the victory - twenty million human lives in four years. And about your sufferings. Immeasurable."

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coffees
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A customer once recommended I check out Svetlana Alexievich's books and bam, we had one in store so I finally decided to pick it up. It's very raw and powerful and it's been tough in its own way to get through it #wordwar2 #russianhistory #womenshistory #sovietwomen

"I am a historian of the soul." - SA

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Daisey
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I listened to this audiobook and also read some sections in print all the way back at the beginning of the year, and it‘s one that has stuck with me.

#12BooksOf2020 #nonfiction #audiobook

Andrew65 Looks good. 4y
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youneverarrived
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Pickpick

My first five star read of the year. An important book that taught me about a side of war not often written about in non-fiction (or not that I know of!). Every single one of these women‘s stories was powerful. I‘m so glad I read it. I feel like I‘ve taken a lot from it. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ #readingeurope2020 #belarus

BarbaraBB That is quite a recommendation! I have another one by her on my shelves. 5y
squirrelbrain Great review and I loved reading along with you all! ❤️ 5y
Megabooks Wow! Fantastic review. Stacking. 5y
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Daisey I agree that this book was great. I will definitely be reading more of the author‘s books. 5y
Librarybelle Great review! 5y
youneverarrived @BarbaraBB is it the Chernobyl one? I really want to read that too. 5y
youneverarrived @squirrelbrain it was great to read it with yous 💚 5y
youneverarrived @Megabooks thank you! I imagine this is easier in print as there‘s a lot of different voices. Hope you like it as much as I did! 5y
youneverarrived @Daisey me too. I want to read the one about Chernobyl next. 5y
BarbaraBB Yes it is. I am going to read it for Ukraine! 5y
youneverarrived @BarbaraBB ohh great choice 👍 5y
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Daisey
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I had a fantastic reading month to start off this year. Of course I loved the reread of The Fellowship of the Ring, and my favorite new reads for the month were both Litsy readalongs as well. I also read a higher than average number of Mt. TBR books and 4 #1001books.

#ReadingStats #MonthlyStats
#FellowshipofTolkien #ATreeGrowsInBrooklynBuddyRead

tdrosebud WTG!! 5y
DareOduale Whoa!!! 👏👏👏 16 books in a month??? 5y
Daisey @tdrosebud @DareOduale Thanks! It was a really good month with some snow days that gave me lots of extra reading time. 5y
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squirrelbrain
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Set off a bit quickly for #readingeurope2020 - I‘ll have this wrapped up by the end of Feb! 🤣

#armenia - An Armenian Sketchbook
#belarus - tagged book
#bulgaria - Border
#denmark - Childhood
#france - My Good Life in France
#italy - The Food of Love Cookery School
#norway - The Mercies
#unitedkingdom - Molly and Me
#monaco - Sleeping with the Enemy
#vaticancity - The Two Popes

Loved Belarus and the UK books, didn‘t like the Monaco book.

Librarybelle Impressive! 5y
Cathythoughts You are flying it.. 🥳📚 5y
Andrew65 Great progress! 5y
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TrishB Great stuff 👍🏻 5y
Hooked_on_books Let me know if you find a book for Kazakhstan. I‘ve come up blank. 5y
julesG Wow! 5y
squirrelbrain @Hooked_on_books - I have this one on my list (I don‘t own it yet, and the library don‘t have it. In the UK it‘s on Kindle for Qc.99 or Amazon for £.99. ) (edited) 5y
erzascarletbookgasm Wow! 👏 5y
Megabooks 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 5y
Butterfinger Wow! Great job! 5y
batsy Wow, that's amazing 👏🏽 5y
youneverarrived Brill 🙌 5y
Hooked_on_books Nice—I shall keep that in mind! Thanks. 🤗 5y
Caroline2 Whey!! You‘re doing really well. 👏 I‘m gonna check out the Belarus one. 👍 5y
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Butterfinger
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Pickpick

Been reading this all month, but finished it during #widehorizonsreadathon @Emilymdxn - book 2

This book totally deserved the Nobel Prize. I experienced a wide range of emotion - mainly anger, especially while reading the conclusion. When all of the world were celebrating victory, the end of war, and the return of the men and women who fought for their countries, one Communist nation was still victimizing its people.

I AM NOT DONE.....

Butterfinger When Soviet POWs were coming home, they were arrested and imprisoned by their own government. I can't stand it. How can a government use fear to govern and still expect loyalty? Stalin's own son was a POW. He killed himself while in camp. Some women, in the 80s were still afraid to say anything offensive about the government. Thank God for Democracy. We're not perfect, but we're still trying "to form a more perfect Union." Now, I'm done. 5y
Butterfinger @Daisey @squirrelbrain @youneverarrived thank you ladies for reading this with me. #Booked2020 - banned book #jennyis30 - politics @jenniferw88 #ReadingEurope - Belarus 5y
youneverarrived Oh wow. No wonder these women were scared to tell of their experience. This book is so important! I‘m glad I got to read it with you yous. 5y
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Butterfinger
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I am writing a book about war...

#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl

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Daisey
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Pickpick

I finished this book this morning and then thought about my review off and on all afternoon. This was a great choice for seeing a different perspective of Europe and WWII than I‘ve read about before. The style is interesting and heart wrenching in how the author brings together bits and pieces of stories from many women throughout the war, in general progressing from the beginning through the end, focusing on the details of daily survival.
👇

Cinfhen Do you recommend audio??? 5y
squirrelbrain Great review! ❤️ 5y
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Librarybelle I‘ve been wondering about this book. Great review...stacking this! 5y
Daisey @Cinfhen I enjoyed the audio, but I also referenced my ebook copy fairly often to check quotes. There is a clear enough difference between the narrator for the author and then another for the women‘s stories. If you want to see all the Russian names, you‘ll need print. 5y
Daisey @Librarybelle Thanks! @squirrelbrain So glad I got to read it with you all! 5y
Weaponxgirl I found this book so moving. 5y
youneverarrived Great review! I love the way it‘s written; how it‘s sectioned into parts and how we get to hear from a variety of women. 5y
squirrelbrain I‘m glad we read it as a team - it was so much better to be able to discuss it. 5y
Cinfhen Good to know!! Thanks 😊 5y
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Daisey
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I think one of the things that surprised me the most in this book was how the women were treated by the men they fought and worked alongside during the war compared to the shunning and mistreatment they faced away from the front. The quote above is just one of many examples.

Also, I read just about 20 hours this weekend for #24B4Monday.

squirrelbrain Yes, that surprised me too.... great work on the readathon! 5y
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Butterfinger

@Daisey @youneverarrived @squirrelbrain

Some quotes that stood out to me this week:

Do you know how beautiful a morning at war can be?

... didn't meet any men in the villages. Only women meet us.

We sat in it till we soaked it off...We were more afraid of shame than death. (I will never complain of my period again).

For the sappers the war ended several years later; they fought longer than everybody else.

Daisey You picked out some quotes that definitely caught my attention as well. Reading this immediately after The English Patient really made the sections about sapper units stand out to me. 5y
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squirrelbrain
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i‘ve found some of the testimonies in this section of the book (the third quarter) even more heart rending and difficult to read. In particular, the part where injured and burned partisans were paraded through villages in the expectation that families would cry out for them and thus expose themselves and be killed. Mothers had to watch and keep silent.

The above quote does help me to understand a bit more why these women wanted to go to war.

youneverarrived It‘s heartbreaking. That quote helped me see why they really wanted to help/fight too. I just read a passage earlier where the woman mentions all she thought about was fighting for the Motherland. 5y
Weaponxgirl I remember that being a particularly gut wrenching part. Also when women talked about loving their country but not the government and felt they had no choice. 5y
squirrelbrain There were so many terrible testimonies, weren‘t there @Weaponxgirl ? 5y
Weaponxgirl @squirrelbrain oh god, I cried a lot reading this. I don‘t normally like when an interviewer is present in the book as sometimes they impose but this author added to it. Such as when one old woman offers her a regional cake and then asked why she is crying. My heart broke and it was so well done (hope I‘m remembering right could be my mind combining stories) 5y
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youneverarrived
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Breakfast in bed with my book and a cuppa 👌

This book is amazing. The way these women tell their stories is so vivid and detailed. I‘m learning about a part of the war I was oblivious to.

rockpools That looks like a good morning! 5y
squirrelbrain Yummy, that looks delish! I‘m loving this book too, if that‘s the right way to talk about such a book..... 5y
Daisey This sounds like a wonderful way to start the day. I agree this book discusses little details I had never realized before. 5y
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youneverarrived @RachelO it was a lush Sunday morning 💙 5y
youneverarrived @squirrelbrain it was, even better that it was made for me 😂 it‘s brilliant - I definitely think reading it in stages like we are is the best way. I‘ve just been reading a bit every day. 5y
youneverarrived @Daisey it was lovely 💙 it‘s eye opening isn‘t it. It‘s interesting hearing from a woman‘s perspective. 5y
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Daisey
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Listening to my #audiobook and shoveling some snow away from the front door this morning. This book is tough to listen to sometimes, but it‘s also a fascinating look at the everyday experiences of so many women during the war. I don‘t know the geography of this area of the world very well, but I truly appreciate the author‘s work to collect stories from as many women as possible throughout the former Soviet Union. #ReadingEurope2020 #Belarus

Daisey @Butterfinger Also a snowy photo from the Midwest for #TammysGiveaway (edited) 5y
Butterfinger Thank you @Daisey I am slightly jealous 😁 5y
squirrelbrain So much snow! Is that usual for the time of year? 5y
Daisey @squirrelbrain You never really know what we‘re going to get in Missouri. Some winters we get almost no snow and others a decent amount. Usually the temperature fluctuates enough that even when we get a decent amount it does not last really long. Today I got just over 6 inches, and with the temperature hovering right around freezing, it is settling already and all sliding off the metal roof which is mainly what I was shoveling. 5y
youneverarrived So pretty ❄️ just a nightmare if it turns to ice! This book is opening my eyes to parts of the war I didn‘t know about. 5y
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Butterfinger
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I just feel so impotent. It's so sad. @Daisey @squirrelbrain @youneverarrived Helen and Katie, you are both going through something, I will understand if you need to stop and finish it later. Both of you are in my thoughts.

youneverarrived Oh, I‘m not going through anything. I‘m ok 💛 that passage really got to me too, so awful. Such brutality, like they didn‘t even see her as a human being. 5y
squirrelbrain I‘m managing to read it OK, although it is all so terrible. Thanks for your concern though ❤️ 5y
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Butterfinger

We hasten to forget, to wipe away the traces, because preserved facts can become evidence, often at the cost of life.

A very poignant thought @Daisey @squirrelbrain @youneverarrived

Daisey I just listened to this same part last night and this quote caught my attention as well. 5y
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squirrelbrain
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So many heartbreaking quotes in this book, it‘s difficult to choose just one or two.

One thing I‘m really struggling with is why (nearly) all of these women were so desperate to go and fight. What do you think it was that made them like that? I‘m not able to discern any coherent reasoning in any testimonies - just that they HAD to do it. Was it due to the awful situations they found themselves in, political brainwashing or something else?

youneverarrived I was thinking about this when I was reading it earlier. It‘s like they were just compelled to go and fight/help, but I think they were also brought up very patriotic and that to fight for their country was what was right. 5y
Itchyfeetreader This sounds moving . Currently seeking. New to me topic for a challenge this year and this sound promising (edited) 5y
squirrelbrain It‘s just difficult for us to comprehend such fervour isn‘t it @youneverarrived? 5y
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squirrelbrain It is moving @Itchyfeetreader, but very good and Im learning so much so would be ideal for that prompt. 5y
Butterfinger In the Bolshevik days, women were treated equally to the men as soldiers. I think this generation felt it was their time to fight too, never thinking that they would receive condescension from their male leaders. It was also this way in China. That is what I've been thinking. 5y
Daisey @youneverarrived @Butterfinger @squirrelbrain I have been thinking about this some as well. I think a large part of it comes from the way in which they were raised, but I think in addition a war in their own land added to that feeling of needing to be involved. 5y
Hooked_on_books This is a wonderful book. I listened to the audio and was floored by it. I think maybe their fervor was a product of the era. I think the US also had a lot of desire to fight/contribute to the war effort once we were in the war. And a lot of respect afterward for those who fought. 5y
squirrelbrain Thanks for all of your thoughts @youneverarrived @Butterfinger @Daisey @Hooked_on_books - I. glad that this is a #buddyread; it would be hard to read alone. 5y
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youneverarrived
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Started reading for the unofficial #24in48. I probably won‘t make the full 24 hours but going to try for 12 at least. Glad to be joining a few of you that are doing this 😁

Cathythoughts Enjoy & good luck Katie ❤️ 5y
youneverarrived @Cathythoughts thank you Cathy 😘 5y
Reggie Good luck!! 5y
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youneverarrived @Reggie thanks 😊 5y
Suet624 Oohhh, i have this on my bookshelf. Can‘t wait to hear what you think of it. 5y
youneverarrived @Suet624 honestly it‘s so good! I‘m reading it gradually over the month with a few Littens and I think it‘s the best way to go with it. 5y
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Daisey
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I realized that I don‘t have any nonfiction in my list of books for this month, so I‘m squeezing this one in. I will probably switch back and forth between it and another audio, so I won‘t be getting through it too quickly. After listening to just under an hour, I like the audio as it emphasizes the oral history perspective, but I‘m also glad I was able to find an ebook copy as well.

#nonfiction #audiobook #ReadingEurope2020

Butterfinger I love that quote. 5y
youneverarrived Glad you‘re joining us 😁 that quote is spot on for how this book is. 5y
squirrelbrain Glad you‘re joining us @Daisey - I nearly posted that quote too! 5y
Daisey @Butterfinger @youneverarrived @squirrelbrain Thanks all! I think this book is going to be pretty intense and thought provoking, so I‘m glad to be reading it with others. 5y
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Butterfinger
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They wouldn't give her a medal, because her parents were enemies of the people. Just before our army came, her leg was blown off. I visited her in the hospital... She wept... " But now," she said, " everybody will trust me."
????

27 likes2 comments
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Butterfinger
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It is very clear to me that the women are defending the Motherland, not Communism or Stalin. In America, we hold our democratic views dear, but would I defend my current government? Just makes me think. @squirrelbrain @youneverarrived

youneverarrived It sounds like they were brought up very patriotic, as are most people I guess. They just wanted to defend their country but a lot of them were so young!! 5y
Suet624 Good question. 5y
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Butterfinger
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How do you learn to walk in a skirt? It was like my legs got tangled.

We were used to rationing; everything was provided by the state, so I'd go to a bakery, take as much bread as I needed, and forgot to pay.

These women break my heart. They are suffering from ptsd and learning to be normal and expected to be normal quickly.

Still thinking of you and your family @squirrelbrain Hope both of you have a great week @youneverarrived

squirrelbrain Thanks Tammy @Butterfinger - it‘s appreciated. Those quotes are certainly heartbreaking, and this would have been a time when there was still ‘no such thing‘ as PTSD..... 5y
youneverarrived Yeah, and a lot of the women are saying they were basically told to not talk about it so they‘ve kept it all to themselves until this book. Have a great week too 💛 @squirrelbrain (edited) 5y
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Butterfinger

@squirrelbrain and @youneverarrived my copy seems to be a recent reprint. I only finished the forward of the author's fight to publish. She was so brave to keep going against the Soviet censors to get this special history printed. Did your copies have this? Something that caught my eye was when the censors said to keep women's dramatic Fabrications to a minimum and she responded with men don't pay attention to the minute details. She is heroic.

youneverarrived Yeah mine has this. Amazing that she kept right at it. 5y
squirrelbrain @Butterfinger @youneverarrived - mine has this too. I found the part where the censor said ‘ We don‘t need your little history, we need the big history‘ particularly poignant. The big history had already been told, by men and we definitely need the ‘little histories‘, whether to tell another side of the story or to humanise history. 5y
Butterfinger @youneverarrived @squirrelbrain to think that she couldn't get it published till Gorbachev. I'm so glad she persevered. 5y
youneverarrived Me too. I‘m really liking it so far. Like she says this emotional, human & day to day perspective is just as important. And it‘s more interesting to me. @squirrelbrain 5y
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squirrelbrain
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Katie and I are having an ‘informal‘ buddy read of this book during January, if anyone else would like to join us.

As well as fitting the #belarus prompt for #readingeurope2020 this would also fit #bannedbook for #booked2020 as well as many other prompts in different challenges.

Katie - I‘ve split the book roughly into four sections, to read to the end of each, if that suits you? We can discuss briefly each weekend.....

Daisey I was just looking up books by this author the other day and saw my library has this available. However, I don‘t think there‘s any way I can fit it in this month. I will be interested to see what you think. 5y
Librarybelle A great idea! 5y
alisiakae I don't think I can read along this month, but I'm stacking for later in the year! 5y
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Butterfinger I'd love to join. I need to order from the library so it may take awhile. 5y
squirrelbrain @youneverarrived - could you postpone a few weeks to let more people join in? I know you can‘t push it too far as you‘ll have other more important things on your mind soon! 👶 5y
BarbaraBB Happy new year Helen 💕. I have another book by her lined up already: 5y
youneverarrived This is perfect! So organised 😁 I‘m going to start reading it tonight. 5y
youneverarrived Oh I‘ve just seen your other comment. That‘s absolutely fine with me to postpone for a few weeks. I‘m going to try and squeeze as much reading time as I can before baby arrives 😁 (edited) 5y
squirrelbrain Let‘s stick with the plan Katie @youneverarrived as otherwise we‘ll clash with the baby 🤣. I‘ve been looking forward to this one anyway so I‘ll start it tonight or tomorrow. Hopefully it will be better than the rubbish I just read! 5y
squirrelbrain @daisey it would be great if you could join in, but we all have so many books, so little time! 😁 5y
squirrelbrain @4thhouseontheleft - hopefully it will be a good one! @BarbaraBB - I‘ve heard good things about this author. 5y
squirrelbrain @Butterfinger - it will be great to have you join in if you can get the book in time. 5y
youneverarrived Haha 😂😂 okie doke I‘ll start tonight then. Shame your first book of the year was bad but think this will be a good one! 5y
Cinfhen Sounds great / screenshot for a later date 😉🧡👍🏽 5y
charl08 This one is amazing. Wishing you good reading. I have the one about children's wartime experiences lined up for when I am feeling strong (this one and Chernobyl Prayer pretty much wrecked me). 5y
Butterfinger @squirrelbrain I should be able to get it by the 10th. 5y
squirrelbrain That‘s great news @Butterfinger - we look forward to you joining us! 5y
squirrelbrain @charl08 - it sounds amazing, although I‘m ready for the emotion.... 5y
Butterfinger @squirrelbrain I have my copy. The library was holding it for me. I'll be ready. 5y
squirrelbrain That‘s great news @Butterfinger - unfortunately this week I probably won‘t be able to join in with you and @youneverarrived . My lovely mother-in-law passed away last night so won‘t be posting much on Litsy. I look forward to seeing both of your posts though and will try to join in when I can. 5y
youneverarrived Oh I‘m so sorry Helen. Thinking of you ❤️❤️ 5y
squirrelbrain Thank you Katie @youneverarrived 😘 5y
Butterfinger I am so sorry. My condolences to you and your family. 5y
Suet624 Gah! Wish I‘d seen this earlier. I‘m now backlogged with books I have to read. I have this one on my shelf and you‘re making me really wish I were reading it. 5y
squirrelbrain Oh no @Suet624 - too many books, too little time.... Sorry you can‘t join us 🙁 5y
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theshrinkette
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Sunday reading.

Weaponxgirl I loved this book, hope you feel the same way 😊 6y
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lauralovesbooks1
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Pickpick

Alexievich compiles an oral history from the women who served at the Soviet front lines during WWII. These are stories that were often silenced, but their courage and patriotism should have been honored all along. Heartbreaking read, but highly recommend.

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bookishbitch
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Bailedbailed

I'm only bailing because I just can't get into war stories right now. Normally I would set it aside until the mood struck but it's a library book I have to return. So for now I'm done. I did like the writing and the presentation. And I feel it is an important book. I might just have to go buy my own copy to read in spurts.

iread2much I had the exact same experience! I love history and this book is amazing but I just can‘t! 6y
6 likes1 comment
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bookishbitch
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I've heard good things about this one. Went into my local library to request through inter-library loan and they had it. #winning

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BakingAndBooks
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When you are reading an intense book and you just take a moment to stare at your bookmark.

Booksblanketsandahotbeverage 😆 Bookmark models... 🤔 (edited) 6y
ephemeralwaltz 🔥🔥 6y
SleepyDragon Hubba hubba 6y
Reggie Lolol it doesn‘t even show you the title of the book he‘s reading!!! (Does it matter? Lol) 6y
29 likes4 comments
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BakingAndBooks
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Pickpick

The intro to this book was amazingly powerful and profound. The writing is elegant and concise. Well worth the read!

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Weaponxgirl
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Pickpick

I don't really know how to review this book. I love what the author has done here, I love the fact that she found these stories. They are important but I hate that this book needed to be written and I hate what these people inside went through before, during and after the war. It's people telling there stories and whilst it is cohesive individual voices come through. This doesn't leave you with any answers at the end, no clear cut good and bad.

Weaponxgirl Just people and their experiences. From many different professions and areas just the war seen through a women's eyes. Covering trying to look pretty still, to losing love, going through torture. This book broke my heart. 6y
Weaponxgirl All I came away with from this is with a feeling of people. The dehumanising effect of war plus people trying to hold on to humanity. The feelings are so deep here, to realise to the smallest degree what happened. I can't recommend this book enough especially in today's climate of them vs us. Stalin was a monster but a lot of people who fought for him didn't do it for him. We need this understanding of pain in our world to prevent it further 6y
Weaponxgirl I love this book! I want everyone to read it when they can manage it emotionally. 6y
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Bookwomble It sounds fantastic - stacked 😊 6y
Weaponxgirl @Bookwomble I did think it looked like your kind of book when I read it 😀 6y
HardcoverHearts I saw this everywhere when I was in London last week and contemplated buying it but ended up passing on it. Good to know it‘s a strong pick! 6y
Bookwomble @Weaponxgirl 😁👍🏻 6y
Weaponxgirl @HardcoverHearts it's not going to be to everyone's taste I don't think and at first your just reading similar stories again and again and then about halfway through it hit me just how many of these stories hadn't been allowed to be told and I got emotional. It's gonna be a hard book for me to top with the impact it left 6y
youneverarrived I have this one and I‘m really looking forward to reading it but just waiting for the right mood. 6y
Weaponxgirl @youneverarrived I completely understand that 6y
66 likes3 stack adds10 comments
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Weaponxgirl

There can't be one heart for hatred and another for love. We only have one, and I always thought about how to save my heart.

My review on this book will be coming tomorrow

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Weaponxgirl
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#readingwomenmonth pink books all from the library recently. The tagged book would go in #readingwomenchallenge as by a Russian author as would unspeakable as its a book of essays. Inferior is about how science got women wrong and I'm hoping to get to it this month too. @Andrew65 @ephemeralwaltz

ephemeralwaltz I've been meaning to read the tagged book! 7y
Weaponxgirl @ephemeralwaltz it looks so interesting doesn't it! I love the cover too 7y
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Suet624
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Only a soul sister would know why I would want to read this. Many thanks and much love to @saresmoore for the late Mother‘s Day, early birthday surprise. I swear...my Litsy friendships have restored my faith in humanity.

batsy How lovely! @saresmoore is the best. I need to read this book too, seems like a necessary one. 7y
Suet624 @batsy seems like a classic for the #sorrowsisters 7y
batsy Indeed! 😆 7y
See All 7 Comments
Bklover @saresmoore You are wonderful!! 7y
saresmoore 😘♥️ 7y
LeahBergen Wonderful! 💕 7y
60 likes7 comments
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Varske
Pickpick

I gave this to my daughter for Christmas but had to buy myself another copy after I started reading it. It‘s revealing about what women did in the war and what they still thought about (haircuts, clean clothes). But it‘s rather Soviet in style (or perhaps women still framed their memories in a Soviet way). I preferred Night of Stone by Catherine Merridale.

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hes7
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Mehso-so

In this book, the author compiles stories from women who fought in a variety of ways during World War II. These are important stories to share, and I do appreciate all the work the author did to collect them. Still, I‘m not a fan of nonfiction (though, recently, I keep reading it), so it just didn‘t hold my interest from start to finish.

#MarchMadnessChallenge

JenP Make sure you post your final score and list of books completed on the blog today: https://thereadersroom.org/march-madness-2018/ 7y
Varske I gave this to my daughter for Christmas but had to buy myself another copy after I started reading it. It‘s revealing about what women did in the war and what they still thought about (haircuts, clean clothes). But it‘s rather Soviet in style (or perhaps women still framed their memories in a Soviet way). I preferred Night of Stone by Catherine Merridale. 7y
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Booksbymybed
War's Unwomanly Face | Svetlana Alexievich
Pickpick

Read in one sitting, cried a lot. Very important book.

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Booksbymybed
War's Unwomanly Face | Svetlana Alexievich
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My homeland celebrated Victory Day today and I picked up the book I've been meaning to read for a while. Already cried a couple of times. One of the teachers at my school was a WW2 combat veteran and her tales were heart-wrenching.

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Deborah42
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Pickpick

The author interviewed hundreds of Soviet women who served during WWII—some of them in support jobs like nurse and laundress, and more than I realized who served in positions usually held by men, like pilot and sniper.

I didn‘t love this book, but I rarely connect with books about war. However, I think it‘s an important read because these women‘s voices deserve to be heard.

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Hooked_on_books
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Pickpick

This book is extraordinary. Russian women telling their stories of WWII, where they acted as nurses, surgeons, snipers, engineers, truck drivers, infantry and more. Their words are compelling, riveting, tragic, and awful. It‘s so important to collect these stories before the generation is gone. I found the audio a plus for the Russian accents, though this is truly a collection and not a single narrative.

#marchmadnesschallenge

WhatDeeReads Similar book but fictional and YA 7y
Hooked_on_books @WhatDeeReads Looks interesting. It‘s so good to see the doors being thrown open on what women have done historically. Hopefully it will help women now to know nothing is impossible. 7y
emilyhaldi Nice review. I started this one last week and couldn‘t continue. It was just too dense and the format was too disjointed for me. Maybe it was the wrong time 🤷🏻‍♀️ 7y
Hooked_on_books @emilyhaldi Thanks! It is definitely a tough one to get into—it‘s so brutal. I think bits and pieces at a time could work well. 7y
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emilyhaldi
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I'm reading this oral history in small bits bc it's so intense and a bit hard to follow. It‘s broken up into vignettes and I'm not sure if I like it ? Alexievich wanted to allow the reader to really feel the emotions & memories of the woman by compiling this "symphony of voices" based on the conversations she recorded with each of them.
#soundofthen
#marchintooz

Kalalalatja That‘s exactly how I felt! 7y
Reviewsbylola That‘s intense. That‘ll be a hard pass from me. 😂 7y
GatheringBooks great choice for the prompt. 7y
105 likes2 stack adds3 comments
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ephemeralwaltz
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Bookstore browsing today. So many TBRs 😍