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Night Train to Odesa

Covering the Human Cost of Russia's War (BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week)

Jen Stout

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11,99
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Sachbuch / Biographien, Autobiographien

Beschreibung

When Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine, millions of lives changed in an instant. Millions of people were suddenly on the move. In this great flow of people was a reporter from the north of Scotland. Jen Stout left Moscow abruptly, ending up on a border post in southeast Romania, from where she began to cover the human cost of Russian aggression. Her first-hand, vivid reporting brought the war home to readers in Scotland as she reported from front lines and cities across Ukraine. Stories from the night trains, birthday parties, military hospitals and bunkers: stories from the ground, from a writer with a deep sense of empathy, always seeking to understand the bigger picture, the big questions of identity, history, hopes and fears in this war in Europe. Night Train to Odesa begins in Russia and continues to focus on people, relationships and individuals in Ukraine. It is the account of a young female reporter with no institutional backup or security. Both in language and themes, it is accessible and highly readable. A BBC RADIO 4 BOOK OF THE WEEK.

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Schlagwörter

Neil Ascherson, BBC Radio 4, BBC Radio, Kharkiv, Ukraine, true war stories, Quentin Sommerville, Book of the Week, Vladamir Putin, Neal Ascherson, Moscow, Peter Ross, Ukraine Russia War, Jon Lee Anderson, Russian Politics, Invasion Luke Harding, Janine di Giovanni, Russia, World politics, True Stories, Conflict, ATACMS, Fergal Keane, Paraic O'Brien, Angus Bancroft, Overreach Owen Matthews, Modern Warfare, Dani Garavelli, Peter Geoghegan, Stormshadow, Firsthand account, Invasion, James Rodgers, Overreach, Putin, Odessa, people at war, War reporting, True accounts, David Patrikarakos, United Nations, Independent Reporting, Geopolitics, Quentin Somerville, Vivid Reporting, Nato, Zelensky, BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week