Tuesday, 25 November 2025

Three Years on Fire: The Destruction of Ukraine by Andrey Kurkov

Something very different for my second post today. I don't tend to read a lot of non fiction but I thought this would be an interesting, informative and important book to read. And I was right. Three Years on Fire: The Destruction of Ukraine by Andrey Kurkov is published in the UK by Open Borders Press, an imprint of Orenda Books and came out last Thursday. My thanks to Anne Cater at Random Things Tours for the invitation and to the publisher for my review copy.



The Blurb

In this third volume of Andrey Kurkov’s war diaries, Ukraine’s greatest living writer chronicles the third year of the full-scale invasion from his home in Kyiv and from journeys all over the country – capturing moments of horror, resilience, absurdity and grace with unmatched clarity.

Children on a contested border wear hooded bulletproof vests to school; soldiers write haiku; professional clowns go to war; and the mother of a young soldier killed in battle uses his compensation money to create a rehabilitation centre for veterans. Roses bloom across Ukraine in quiet tribute to a florist and soldier killed in Avdiivka, remembered by those who once bought his flowers.

The Dnipro River seems to slow when the first missiles fall, as though nature itself had paused in shock. In Pokrovsk, 7,500 residents refuse to leave a city that no longer exists – their homes obliterated but their will unbroken. A general’s seventeen-year-old pet toad becomes an iconic symbol of defiance. And buried beneath a cherry tree, a murdered writer’s final diary is recovered, a haunting echo of a silenced voice.

From the home front to the trenches, Kurkov captures the rhythms of survival – the quiet rituals, unlikely joys, unexpected humour and appalling costs – in an intimate and astonishing record of national endurance. Three Years on Fire is a luminous act of remembrance, rich with unforgettable detail and human spirit, from a writer whose voice stands witness to everything Ukraine has lost – and everything it refuses to give up.



My Review

I was not aware of this author before reading this book but see he has, at least, one book translated into English, and has also written two previous war diaries, which I would be interested to read. Three Years on Fire covers April 2024 to April 2025, and is presented as you would expect a diary to be. The entries are beautifully written, each discussing a couple of topics or events which are on the author's mind, as his country is being destroyed around him. Andrey Kurkov lives in Kyiv, which hadn't been too badly affected (relatively) by the war but started to get more attacks this year. 

This book is so interesting. My only real knowledge of Ukraine and the situation there is from what I've seen on the news, so to read a true account from somebody living with the war as a backdrop has been educational and enlightening. And it's particularly interesting to hear a civilian account - how life is, three years into a war. A war in which thousands have died, millions of homes have been destroyed and millions of Ukrainians have been internally displaced, or have left Ukraine completely. 

I made a ton of notes when reading this book, too many to cover all of them but I'll mention some of the things discussed. Some circus professions are deemed exempt from military service, which caused angry backlash on social media. Several well known clowns, however, are on the front line, whilst foreign clowns entertain children in their absence. The war has caused an increase in gambling, and Trump's election has caused an increase in drinking and a decrease in book sales, perhaps giving some indication of the emotions of Ukrainians. Tuareg music became a symbol of rebellion following the ambush of a private Russian military group by Tuareg rebels in Mali. The author recommends trying some Tuareg music - I did, and I would recommend it too. Ukrainians who are able to still to do things that being them joy, aware that those things, or they, might not be here tomorrow. Shopping (there was excitement at Zara reopening in Kyiv), eating out, theatre (there is a poignant story of two empty seats at a new year show in Kyiv), museums and art galleries. Through this I learned of Maria Primachenko, Ukraine's most well known artist in the 'naive' style - check her work out on Google - and I loved this comment by the author: 'Perhaps it is this seemingly naive stubbornness that lies at the heart of Ukrainian invincibility: the inexhaustible readiness to rise from yet another layer of ashes in a blaze of colour, like the paintings of Maria Primachencko'.

This war is costing Ukraine $100million dollars a day, and countless lives. There is growing disillusion about Trump's promise to end the war, anger as he humiliated Zelensky, and chummed up with Putin, and confusion over what he'll do next. Ukraine is a pawn between the two powers of the US and Russia. But it's clear from this book that one thing Ukraine won't do is lie down. They need more support from Europe, they are  are under resourced, tired, battered, bruised and far worse, but the indefatigable resilience of the people comes through loud and clear here, even though 'For all of us the future remains unstable, treacherous, broken. The new geopolitical reality deprives us of any vision of the future.' (written in September this year following the worst attack on Kyiv thus far). I'm really glad I read this book, just wish there was more I could do other than hope for a swift end to the war. 


The Author


Andrey Kurkov was born near Leningrad in 1961 and graduated from Kyiv Pedagogical Academy of Foreign Languages in 1983. After working as a prison guard in Odesa and as a journalist, he self-published his texts and found renown as a novelist. His novel Death and the Penguin, his first in English translation, became an international bestseller, translated into more than 43 languages, and has been in print since its publication in 2001. Since the beginning of the Russian invasion, the author has published unrivalled reports from his wartorn country in newspapers and magazines all over the world. He has been a regular presence on radio and television, including BBC Radio 4’s “Letter from Ukraine”, and travelled worldwide to lecture on the perilous state of his country. He has, in the process, become a crucial voice for the people of Ukraine. Of his war journals, Diary of an Invasion was published in 2022 and Our Daily War in 2024.

Scars of Silence by Johana Gustawsson (translated by David Warriner)

In the first of two blog tour stops today, I'm looking at Scars of Silence by Johana  Gustawsson and translated into English by David Warriner. Johana is one of my favourite writers, one of my favourite people, really, and I've been super excited for the release of this book. If you search her name on the blog you'll be able to find reviews of several of her books, including of the first of the Lidingō mysteries, Yule Island. Huge thanks to Anne Cater for inviting me and to the publisher for my review copy. I just need to get myself a hardback copy with spredges (see picture below)! 



The Blurb

Twenty-three years ago, a young woman was murdered on the Swedish island of Lidingö.
The island has kept its silence.
Until now…

As autumn deepens into darkness in Lidingö, on the Stockholm archipelago, the island is plunged into chaos: in the space of a week, two teenaged boys are murdered. Their bodies are left deep in the forest, dressed in white tunics with crowns of candles on their heads, like offerings to Saint Lucia.

Maïa Rehn has fled Paris for Lidingö after a family tragedy. But when the murders shake the island community, the former police commissioner is drawn into the heart of the investigation, joining Commissioner Aleksander Storm to unravel a mystery as chilling as the Nordic winter.

As they dig deeper, it becomes clear that a wind of vengeance is blowing through the archipelago, unearthing secrets that are as scandalous as they are inhuman.

But what if the victims weren’t who they seemed? What if those long silenced have finally found a way to strike back?

How far would they go to make their tormentors pay?

And you – how far would you go?


My Review

As I mentioned in my intro, I've been looking forward to this book as I loved everything I've read by Johana Gustawsson. She writes about dark stuff but always with emotion, and very real characters. 

Scars of Silence opens with a bang. It's a shocking scene, and one for which we have no immediate context, but it's a scene that immediately drew me in. French former police commissioner Maïa is on a leave of absence following a tragedy, and staying in her husband's family home in Lidingö. She is drawn in to the investigation after the murder of a young man, who is found dressed as St Lucia, who is celebrated with a festival in mid December. The murder is very similar to one that happened more than two decades earlier, except the victim then was a young woman. When a second young man is murdered the investigation ratchets up a notch, and Maïa works alongside local commissioner Aleksander. What they discover is chilling and sad, as long held secrets break free. 

Johana Gustawsson always presents us with such whole, three dimensional characters. Maïa is instantly likeable and relatable, as she struggles with getting on with life following a personal tragedy. She's reluctant to mix and socialise any more than she needs to but is encouraged by good friend Christian. The young man's murder, and the request of local resident Sophia, actually give Maïa a focus. She is lucky that Commissioner Storm is willing to be so open with her, and the two develop a good working relationship and a tentative friendship. Perhaps aided by the fact that Aleksander is also dealing with some personal stuff for a large part of the book. Again, a reflection of real life. 

The investigation is detailed, and whilst it is not full of peril, it is no less tense as Maïa and Aleks search for the truth. They uncover secrets and lies aplenty, and the truth they discover is sad and shocking and grubby. And the ramifications of historical events are wide ranging, horrifying and painful. 

Before I conclude I want to give a shout out to David Warriner, the translator. For me, translators are unsung heroes. Because of them, I have been able to enjoy so many fabulous foreign language novels, of which this is the latest, that I wouldn't have been able to read otherwise. So thank you, translators! And particularly to David for his brilliant work on this. 

As well as giving us a cracking thriller, Scars of Silence touches on family, love, death, grief, consent and entitlement. The author has never shied away from dealing with difficult issues and she does so very well. I loved the central characters, how real they were and the emotional depth they had. And the storyline delivers a punch. Highly recommend it! Now, I'm off to find some spredges...


The Author


Born in Marseille, France, and with a degree in Political Science, Johana Gustawsson has worked as a journalist for the French and Spanish press and television. Her critically acclaimed Roy & Castells series including Block 46, Keeper and Blood Song won the Plume d’Argent, Balai de la découverte, Balai d'Or and Prix Marseillais du Polar awards, and is now published in 23 countries. A TV adaptation is currently under way in a French, Swedish and UK co-production. The Bleeding was a number-one bestseller in France receiving critical acclaim across the globe, and Yule Island won multiple awards including Book of the Year with France’s biggest retailer Cultura and has been optioned for the screen. In 2025 Johana teamed up with Norwegian crime writer Thomas Enger to write the international bestselling mystery SON to immense critical acclaim. Johana is regarded as France’s most prestigious, successful female crime writer and she lives in Sweden with her Swedish husband and their three sons.