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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Andriy Lyubka , Yulia Lyubka , Kate TsurkanPublisher: Academic Studies Press Imprint: Cherry Orchard Books ISBN: 9798887198408Pages: 210 Publication Date: 20 November 2025 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviews“Ukraine's remarkable resistance to Russia's invasion is a true people's war. This is a country that does not look to politicians to tell them what to do. The country survives because people take agency and work with each other to get weapons to the front, supply hospitals, organise partisan movements and help refugees. Lyubka tells the stories of soccer players and coffee roasters, priests and Roma who are all playing their role in this great community of resistance. In the thing once known as 'the West' we often lament the loss of community—in Ukraine it is thriving and winning against the invasion of a cruel Empire. Lyubka brings it alive in prose that is unsentimental yet totally inspiring.” —Peter Pomerantsev, the author of This is Not Propaganda “An author and a war. Real-life autobiographical nonfiction road movie by and about a writer who supplied the army with 400 jeeps. Amazing story about amazing people. How to deliver 400 jeeps to the front lines for the Ukrainian army and stay alive? In this book you will find answers to questions that you do not yet know exist. This book is an eye-opener about the amazing interaction between the front and the rear in Ukraine from the cult writer Andriy Lyubka, who became one of the initiators of 'army crowdfunding.'” —Andrey Kurkov, author of Death and the Penguin “Delicate, tender, sharply observed vignettes of the Russo-Ukrainian war told from the inside – unexpected and profoundly humane” —Charlotte Higgins, editor-in-chief of The Guardian “Ukraine's remarkable resistance to Russia's invasion is a true people's war. This is a country that does not look to politicians to tell them what to do. The country survives because people take agency and work with each other to get weapons to the front, supply hospitals, organise partisan movements and help refugees. Lyubka tells the stories of soccer players and coffee roasters, priests and Roma who are all playing their role in this great community of resistance. In the thing once known as 'the West' we often lament the loss of community—in Ukraine it is thriving and winning against the invasion of a cruel Empire. Lyubka brings it alive in prose that is unsentimental yet totally inspiring.” — Peter Pomerantsev, the author of This is Not Propaganda “An author and a war. Real-life autobiographical nonfiction road movie by and about a writer who supplied the army with 400 jeeps. Amazing story about amazing people. How to deliver 400 jeeps to the front lines for the Ukrainian army and stay alive? In this book you will find answers to questions that you do not yet know exist. This book is an eye-opener about the amazing interaction between the front and the rear in Ukraine from the cult writer Andriy Lyubka, who became one of the initiators of 'army crowdfunding.'” — Andrey Kurkov, author of Death and the Penguin “Delicate, tender, sharply observed vignettes of the Russo-Ukrainian war told from the inside – unexpected and profoundly humane” — Charlotte Higgins, editor-in-chief of The Guardian Author InformationAndriy Lyubka is a Ukrainian poet, essayist, novelist, and translator known for his sharp wit and keen observations on contemporary life. Raised in Vynohradiv, Ukraine, he studied Ukrainian Philology at Uzhhorod National University and later earned a master's degree in Balkan Studies from Warsaw University. Lyubka is the author of multiple poetry collections, short stories, and novels, including Carbide, a vivid exploration of smuggling culture in Ukraine's Zakarpattia region. He also translates literature from Polish, Serbian, Bosnian, Croatian, and English. His essays and commentary appear in leading Ukrainian and international publications such as New Eastern Europe, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, and Den'. Currently based in Uzhhorod, Lyubka continues to be a significant voice in Ukrainian literature, offering insightful and often humorous perspectives on identity, conflict, and everyday resilience. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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