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Last Witnesses
Last Witnesses: Unchildlike Stories | Svetlana Alexievich
8 posts | 8 read | 8 to read
What did it mean to grow up in the Soviet Union during the Second World War? In the late 1970s, Svetlana Alexievich started interviewing people who had experienced war as children, the generation that survived and had to live with the trauma that would forever change the course of the Russian nation. With remarkable care and empathy, Alexievich gives voice to those whose stories are lost in the official narratives, uncovering a powerful, hidden history of one of the most important events of the twentieth century. Published to great acclaim in the USSR in 1985 and now available in English for the first time, this masterpiece offers a kaleidoscopic portrait of the human consequences of the war - and an extraordinary chronicle of the Russian soul.
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JenniferEgnor
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Pickpick

You think you‘re ready to read something like this, but you aren‘t. There are moments when your breath is taken away, and the tears come. All of us can become a victim of war at any moment—imagine it as a child, that suddenly everything is stripped from you. Imagine what it would take to survive. In this collection from Soviet children, there are horrific accounts of WWII events. These stories must be told. I am reminded of Gaza‘s children.

JenniferEgnor No matter how hard it is, keep reading. Do not look away. 5mo
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charl08
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If everybody was asked, "What is childhood?" they would each say something of their own. For me childhood is mama and candies....
During the war I not only didn't taste any candies I didn't even see any. I ate my first candy a few years after the war... About three years after... I was already a big girl. Ten years old.

I could never understand how anybody could not want chocolate candy. How? It's impossible.

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charl08
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The war is my history book. My solitude... I missed the time of childhood, it fell out of my life. I'm a man without a childhood. Instead of a childhood, I have the war.

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charl08
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I'd forgotten I had this signed copy.

(Am I doing the least festive reading today?)

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charl08
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Books I'm hoping to get to this weekend.
Alexievich
Shepherd
Ditlevsen

Although given how full on this week has been, it might just be 😴😴😴💤

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suzie.reads
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Just wow! I'm really not surprised this has won awards I thought it was fantastic and so powerful. Unchildlike stories from children growing up during the second world war. Heartbreaking what people went though, I can't even begin to understand 😥
#ReadingEurope2020 #Belarus 🇧🇾 (28th country) #Murder2020 (book 21)

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Nitpickyabouttrains
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Another audiobook for me. This one was recollections and histories of children during ww2. Specifically in Russia and areas under Russian rule. Some stories were very short, others longer. Some more terrible then others, in terms of things witnessed. Though they were told by older folks, they were memories of childhood.

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Floresj
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Absolutely horrifying, this book is a compilation of many interviews Alexievich conducted of children of WWII. I love this style of telling the story, but through the memories of children what is said and inferred is heartbreaking. However, I don‘t know of a single WWII book that would make one more compassionate to those who are present day refugees than reading the terror of living through war and the lasting impact of it on past children.

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