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Looking forward to victory – but focused on daily life: a review of Andrey Kurkov’s Our Daily War

Many Ukrainian writers have found new purpose in documenting Russia’s ongoing aggression. Ranging from the personal to the political and everything in between, these works have attempted to get to the heart of the conflict. This is very much the case when it comes to a new book by Andrey Kurkov.

September 2, 2025 - Nicole Yurcaba - Books and Reviews

Cover of Andrey Kurkov's Our Daily War. Photo: AS photo family / Shutterstock

While innumerable diaries – both journalistic and civilian – written during the current Russo-Ukrainian War have been published, very few manage to capture the fusion of individual life with the socio-political changes and upheaval that Russia’s full-scale invasion swiftly forced on Ukrainians. However, Andrey Kurkov’s Our Daily War – the third chronological log about the war that Kurkov has published since 2014 – is not like other war diaries. While Serhiy Zhadan’s Sky Above Kharkiv captures the sweeping patriotism and social media influence that gripped Ukraine during the war’s initial days, Kurkov’s Our Daily War provides the reader with an inside look at how the war’s continued presence has affected Ukrainians across the globe politically, socially and financially.

One of the central themes of Our Daily War is the necessity of the arts during war time. Excerpts such as “Poetry and Other Forms of Torture” highlight Ukraine’s historical relationship with its poets and writers. Kurkov writes, “‘Posthumous journeys’ are once again a sad hallmark of Ukrainian burial culture.” He explains the various burials of Ukraine’s national poet, Taras Shevchenko, who “was first buried in St. Petersburg” and then “exhumed and, in accordance with his wishes, taken to Kyiv”. Ukraine’s celebrations of its poets and writers frequently impress global audiences, and Kurkov’s entry reminds readers that the country’s spirit “is kept alive by the souls of dead writers and poets”. It also shows that Ukrainians “still feel supported by the souls of Taras Shevchenko and Vasyl Stus”. Kurkov carefully ties Ukraine’s relationship with poetry and other forms of literature to its culture. However, this relationship also impacts their relationship with their land and landscapes.

Kurkov defines culture as “the most obvious connection between an individual and the land on which he or she lives”. He focuses on how the destruction of a culture results in people no longer having “anything to do with the country, or with the land”. More significantly – and most importantly for western readers – Kurkov reminds readers that Ukrainian culture “has always been an island” and “at times a surprisingly small island”, one “so small it was in danger of disappearing”. Nonetheless, the preservation methods utilized by Ukrainians in order to protect and maintain their language and traditions inform how they attempt to protect and preserve fragile environmental spaces. One of Our Daily War’s most hopeful – and inspiring – passages is Kurkov’s detailed explanation about DTEK’s (Ukraine’s largest energy provider) “Lelechenki” project. This aims to protect the nests of one of Ukraine’s most important ornithological symbols – the white stork. When villagers notice an unstable stork nest, they can call a team of electricians, who will move the nest to a metal platform so that it is safely placed above the high electrical cables. Kurkov’s focus on such environmental practices shows that Ukrainians are invested in protecting all aspects of national life. When Kurkov writes, “Culture, music, film and literature have special responsibilities,” he means that these special responsibilities extend to the natural world as well.

Our Daily War adeptly tackles the identity issues that emerged for Ukrainians not only during the most recent invasion, but since 2014, when Russia first annexed parts of eastern Ukraine and Crimea. Kurkov notes that “The issue of self-identification has become one of the main themes of public discussion.” Since the full-scale invasion in 2022, more and more Ukrainians are taking an interest in their nation’s history, classical literature, and modern poetry. He adds, “The process of Ukrainisation is now unstoppable” and “Ukrainianness has become a powerful weapon” in the defence of the country. Kurkov, who frequently finds himself at the centre of these self-identification debates because he is of Russian origin, speaking Russian as his native language, admits that if people overlook these characteristics, he comes “out as an ideal Ukrainian who could be enthusiastically welcomed into the fold of ideal Ukrainians”. In essence, Kurkov simplifies his and other Ukrainians’ quandary as best as he can:

“I live in a beautiful country with a complex character and complex history, where each citizen has his or her own image of the Ukrainian state in their head and everyone considers their image to be the correct one. In other words, we are a society of individualists.”

It is this inherent individualism that leads Ukraine to foster “freedom of expression and championing diversity”, which both have the potential to act as a “unifying force” for all Ukrainians as they embark on the path towards their “post-war future”.

The entries in this book act as well-framed snapshots into the daily life of civilians, politicians and defenders. Most of all, Kurkov shows readers who may be both familiar and unfamiliar with Ukraine its literal and metaphorical beauty. Simultaneously, his writings show how the country’s labyrinthine relationships with Russia and the other nations surrounding it inform its existence today. More so, Kurkov effectively weaves Ukrainian history into the myriad of current events, which have brought a nation and its brave people into global headlines. The war will continue, and the necessity of publishing works like Our Daily War will prove even more pressing. With Our Daily War, Andrey Kurkov establishes himself as not only one of Ukraine’s greatest writers, but also one of its greatest warriors.

Our Daily War by Andrey Kurkov. Published by Open Borders Press in 2025.

Nicole Yurcaba is a Ukrainian American of Hutsul/Lemko origin. A poet and essayist, her poems and reviews have appeared in Appalachian Heritage, Atlanta Review, Seneca Review, New Eastern Europe, and Ukraine’s Euromaidan Press. Nicole holds an MFA in Writing from Lindenwood University, teaches poetry workshops for Southern New Hampshire University, and is Humanities faculty at Blue Ridge Community and Technical College in the United States. She also serves as a guest book reviewer for Sage Cigarettes, Tupelo Quarterly, Colorado Review, and Southern Review of Books.


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