EBOOK

By the Second Spring

Seven Lives and One Year in the War in Ukraine

Danielle Leavitt
(0)
Year
2025
Language
English

About

An intimate, affecting account of life during wartime, told through the lives that have been shattered.

Even as scores of Americans rally to the Ukrainian cause and adopt Volodymyr Zelensky as a hero, the lives of Ukrainians remain opaque and mostly anonymous. In By the Second Spring, the historian Danielle Leavitt goes beyond familiar portraits of wartime heroism and victimhood to reveal the human experience of the conflict. An American who grew up in Ukraine, Leavitt draws on her deep familiarity with the country and a unique trove of online diaries to track a diverse group of Ukrainians through the first year of Russia's full-scale invasion. Among others, we meet Vitaly, whose plans to open a coffee bar in a Kyiv suburb come to naught when the Russian army marches through his town and his apartment building is split in two by a rocket; Anna, who drops out of the police academy and begins a tumultuous relationship with a soldier she meets online; and Polina, a fashion-industry insider who returns home from Los Angeles with her American husband to organize relief. To illuminate the complex resurgence of Ukraine's national spirit, Leavitt also tells the story of Volodymyr Shovkoshitniy—a nuclear engineer at Chernobyl who went on to lead a daring campaign in the late 1980s to return the bodies of three Ukrainian writers who'd died in a Soviet gulag. Writing with closeness and compassion, Leavitt has given us an interior history of Europe's largest land war in seventy-five years.

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Reviews

"[A] remarkable book . . . Leavitt provides historical context to demonstrate how Putin's war is a continuation of Russian oppression dating from the czarist and Soviet empires, and skillfully uses the seven stories to reveal the full magnitude of that history . . . By the Second Spring celebrates the ordinary people who ultimately are heroes because of their humanity, not despite it."
Deborah Mason, BookPage (starred review)
"The war between Ukraine and Russia, alas, is easy for most of us to ignore by now, unless there is an audacious attack that captures our attention for a day or two. This is why Danielle Leavitt's book is so important, for she focuses on seven people across Ukraine and details their everyday lives of courage and resistance. From a coffee-shop owner outside Kyiv to a villager who runs a pig farm, t
Jim Kelly, Air Mail
"Moving and poignant . . . [Leavitt] creates a nuanced"
and often devastating

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