Nothing Bad Has Ever Happened: A Bouquet for Victoria Amelina
NOTE: This PDF is being made available for free in honor of Victoria and those who have generously contributed their work to this volume. A print version is also available at printing cost, not available for distribution: www.arrowsmithpress.com/preorder/nothing-bad-paperback . Print copies will arrive in 1-2 weeks.
At thirty-seven, Victoria Amelina was one of Ukraine's most promising young writers, on the verge of a major international career, when Russia's full-scale invasion against Ukraine broke out. On hearing the news, Victoria, who was traveling in Egypt with her ten-year-old son, headed home. After dropping him off with her mother in Krakow, she hurried back to her native Lviv, where she joined her fellow citizens as a full-time volunteer, collecting supplies to aid the soldiers on the front lines. On seeing the horrors of war up close, Victoria decided that wasn't enough so she signed up with Truth Hounds, a decade-old human rights organization committed to documenting war crimes. She began a new book, the by now legendary War and Justice Diary: Looking at Women Looking at War, in which she wrote about the women who had set aside their own lives in order to document war crimes. On June 27th, Victoria was dining in a restaurant near the front lines when a missile struck and Victoria herself became the victim of a war crime. Nothing Bad Has Ever Happened is a tribute to this remarkable individual by writers from Europe, Latin America, Ukraine, and the US. Among them are two Pulitzer Prize winners and a host of internationally acclaimed writers.
NOTE: This PDF is being made available for free in honor of Victoria and those who have generously contributed their work to this volume. A print version is also available at printing cost, not available for distribution: www.arrowsmithpress.com/preorder/nothing-bad-paperback . Print copies will arrive in 1-2 weeks.
At thirty-seven, Victoria Amelina was one of Ukraine's most promising young writers, on the verge of a major international career, when Russia's full-scale invasion against Ukraine broke out. On hearing the news, Victoria, who was traveling in Egypt with her ten-year-old son, headed home. After dropping him off with her mother in Krakow, she hurried back to her native Lviv, where she joined her fellow citizens as a full-time volunteer, collecting supplies to aid the soldiers on the front lines. On seeing the horrors of war up close, Victoria decided that wasn't enough so she signed up with Truth Hounds, a decade-old human rights organization committed to documenting war crimes. She began a new book, the by now legendary War and Justice Diary: Looking at Women Looking at War, in which she wrote about the women who had set aside their own lives in order to document war crimes. On June 27th, Victoria was dining in a restaurant near the front lines when a missile struck and Victoria herself became the victim of a war crime. Nothing Bad Has Ever Happened is a tribute to this remarkable individual by writers from Europe, Latin America, Ukraine, and the US. Among them are two Pulitzer Prize winners and a host of internationally acclaimed writers.
NOTE: This PDF is being made available for free in honor of Victoria and those who have generously contributed their work to this volume. A print version is also available at printing cost, not available for distribution: www.arrowsmithpress.com/preorder/nothing-bad-paperback . Print copies will arrive in 1-2 weeks.
At thirty-seven, Victoria Amelina was one of Ukraine's most promising young writers, on the verge of a major international career, when Russia's full-scale invasion against Ukraine broke out. On hearing the news, Victoria, who was traveling in Egypt with her ten-year-old son, headed home. After dropping him off with her mother in Krakow, she hurried back to her native Lviv, where she joined her fellow citizens as a full-time volunteer, collecting supplies to aid the soldiers on the front lines. On seeing the horrors of war up close, Victoria decided that wasn't enough so she signed up with Truth Hounds, a decade-old human rights organization committed to documenting war crimes. She began a new book, the by now legendary War and Justice Diary: Looking at Women Looking at War, in which she wrote about the women who had set aside their own lives in order to document war crimes. On June 27th, Victoria was dining in a restaurant near the front lines when a missile struck and Victoria herself became the victim of a war crime. Nothing Bad Has Ever Happened is a tribute to this remarkable individual by writers from Europe, Latin America, Ukraine, and the US. Among them are two Pulitzer Prize winners and a host of internationally acclaimed writers.