Olga Onuch is Senior Lecturer in Politics at the University of Manchester. Henry E. Hale is Professor of Political Science and International Affairs at George Washington University.
"""[A] deeply researched and well-argued book [that] locate[s] the roots of Zelensky's ability to captivate and mobilize the imagination of his fellow citizens in the rise of Ukrainian civic identity."" -- Serhii Plokhy, The Washington Post""[Ukraine] is now led by men and women like Zelensky in their thirties and forties, whom Olga Onuch and Henry E. Hale describe in The Zelensky Effect as the Independence Generation--those for whom the achievement of Ukrainian independence was a formative political experience.""--Timothy Garton Ash, New York Review of Books""Refreshingly data-driven and convincing on why [Zelensky's] brand of Ukrainian-ness - emphasising ""civic duty, the importance of Ukraine's diversity, and the common quotidian experiences that bound Ukrainians together"" - has such appeal."" -- TLS""Onuch and Hale artfully combine Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelensky's biography and a chronicle of Ukraine's post communist development, rich with empirical data and rigorous research."" -- Foreign Affairs""Packed with statistical analysis of polling data, social media posts, articles, and speeches, this book answers many questions about how unified resistance on the ground has repelled the mightier Russian military."" -- Foreword Reviews""The go-to book for grasping Ukrainians' morale in the face of Russian aggression, and the determination of their president, who has demonstrated atmospheric levels of heroism and leadership-perhaps unlike any other in the world in recent decades."" -- Marc Berenson, Senior Lecturer at King's Russia Institute, King's College London""This wonderfully written and engaging book documents the emergence of Ukrainian civic national identity, best exemplified by Zelensky. A must-read for anyone wishing to understand contemporary Ukraine and what Ukrainians believe, value and fight for."" -- Eugene Finkel, Kenneth H. Keller Associate Professor of International Affairs, Johns Hopkins University""Drawing on years of research on Ukrainian politics and society, this timely study paints a fuller picture of Zelensky and the conditions that made him who he is today, and deserves a wide readership at this critical moment in European history."" -- Gwendolyn Sasse, Director of the Centre for East European and International Studies (ZOiS)""An essential book for understanding how a critical mass of Ukrainians converged around a vision of Ukraine grounded in democratic ideals, a European future and sovereign statehood."" -- Oxana Shevel, Associate Professor of Political Science, Tufts University, and an associate of the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute and of the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University""Furnishing significant insight into Russia""s invasion of Ukraine, this sheds light as well on one of the most important (and improbable) leaders of the twenty-first century."" -- Michael Kimmage, Professor of History, Catholic University of America, and Visiting Fellow, German Marshall Fund""A definitive portrait not of a man but of a nation.""--The Moscow Times""Enlightening."" -- Survival"