Media 

Book Launch at HURI | November 20, 2019

Praise for Courage and Fear

“Thoughtful, insightful, exceptionally well researched and moving at the same time, Courage and Fear is the book that plunges the reader into the depth of the history in one of the most contested places on the European map. The city known in the twentieth century as Lemberg, Lwow, Lvov and Lviv, had more nationalities and states that claimed it than the multiplicity of its names might suggest. Ola Hnatiuk manages to weave the personal stories of the Polish, Jewish and Ukrainian citizens of the city with the stories of the powerful states and dictators that tried to control them in the tapestry that reveals the Europe’s tragedies of World War II era in a new scholarly and human dimension. A must read for anyone who wants to understand the past and grasp the essence of the present struggles of Ukraine and its citizens.”

— Serhii Plokhy, Harvard University

“Considering how painful and not talked-through questions from our very recent history remain for us, it is difficult to overestimate the importance of Ola Hnatiuk’s work. It appears that we all, one way or another, will have to answer some very uncomfortable questions in the very near future. Books such as this one will make that a little easier.”

— Serhiy Zhadan, author

“[Courage and Fear] is much more than a memoir. … What is novel here is the treatment of the sources as points of departure for the construction of individual lives and milieus, rather than for narratives about nations and institutions. The outcome is an image of Lwów that is, frankly, unsurpassed in its intellectual and emotional richness, in Polish or for that matter in any other language that I know. … [Hnatiuk’s] book is written at the literary level of the very best of the memoirs, but it is also as critical, and indeed more critical of the sources than academic monographs. She sees through the problems of individual perception as well as the problems of national historical narration.”

— Timothy Snyder, Richard C. Levin Professor of History, Yale University

“The biography of Lviv during this time period is an exceptional and beautifully written story, one that is available in both Ukrainian and Polish. Hnatiuk presents the story free from academic jargon and does not overbear with the amount of material. A simple description has never been enough for Lviv, the topic of so many academic and non-academic works. Yet Hnatiuk, master of words that she is, rooted in both Ukrainian and Polish culture, has succeeded in presenting it as completely as possible.”

— Dorota Sieroń-Galusek, Eastern Café

“Hnatiuk evokes rather than argues; and she avoids exploiting the advantages of hindsight to justify a tone of superiority towards her protagonists. As a researcher, she is impeccable in her commitment to thoroughness, her respect for truthfulness, her attention to nuance and her resistance to whitewashing moral ambiguity.”

— Marci Shore, Times Literary Supplement