Marci Shore is associate professor of history at Yale University and award-winning author of Caviar and Ashes and The Taste of Ashes. She has spent much of her adult life in Central and Eastern Europe.
[Shore's] history entails an extraordinary declaration of the power of human will and self-determination. -Kate Brown, TLS The Ukrainian Night . . . seeks to portray the ideals that animated the protesters. Shore succeeds admirably, particularly because she tells the story through their words. . . . Her depictions of the sights, sounds and smells on the Maidan [are] superb. -Rajan Menon, New York Times Book Review Shore draws evocative portraits of the Ukrainian demonstrators who braved beatings and even death in 2013 to protest the government of President Viktor Yanukovych. -New York Times Book Review, Editors' Choice Ms. Shore identifies the surrealism exemplified in the war as an enduring cultural divide. In the West people tended to believe that 'there were constraints on reality', whereas 'eastern Europeans knew that anything was possible'. One fear that stalks this short, powerful book is that this distinction is breaking down, and not as the revolutionaries intended-that Ukraine, with its saturating propaganda and warped identity politics, might be a vision of the West's future rather than the other way round. -The Economist Marci Shore has written a book that has a chance to become indispensable reading for anyone interested in 'revolution studies': passionate and thought-provoking. -Aleksandra Konarzewska, Forum An excellent guide to understanding the Maidan Revolution in Ukraine, and its consequences. Shore has deep knowledge of the region, its history, and its current torment, and offers a lucid evaluation of the complicated evolution of Eastern Europe, which faces a dangerous situation. Her book is well written and honestly and deeply documented through direct and acute observations of facts on the ground. -Norman Manea, Francis Flournoy Professor of European Studies and Writer in Residence, Bard College Shore has the rare capacity to listen to hundreds of voices and turn them into both story and history-the finest possible achievement for any writer. In this book, she brings to life the protests and revolution in Ukraine from 2013-2014 by pairing personal anecdotes with political and historical analysis, showing readers how violence can affect one's own friends and acquaintances, inspiring them to start a revolution. -Slavenka Drakulic, author of How We Survived Communism and Even Laughed The best way to make sense of a revolution unfolding in front of your eyes is to fall in love with it. This is exactly what Marci Shore does in this insightful, moving, and beautifully written reflection on the Ukrainian Maidan. -Ivan Krastev, Chairman, Center for Liberal Strategies, Sofia, Bulgaria Marci Shore, one of the most original American historians today, conjures up the Maidan, the first truly postmodern revolution, with lively scenes and invocations of the layers of a complex past. Her book preserves the memory of this historical moment, which has a unique significance for our political future. -Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, Albert Guerard Professor in Literature, Stanford University This remarkable book gives you a sense of the Euromaidan in Kiev as lived experience, seen through the eyes of a host of very different participants. Shore brilliantly captures the contingency, uncertainty, and chaos that was transmuted into the remarkable, seemingly transcendent solidarity of the Maidan's unified resistance to a corrupt and cruel regime. --Charles Taylor, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, McGill University