One Soldier's War is a visceral and unflinching memoir of a young
Russian soldier's experience in the Chechen wars that brilliantly
captures the fear, drudgery, chaos, and brutality of modern combat. An
excerpt of the book was hailed by Tibor Fisher in the Guardian as
"right up there with Catch-22 and Michael Herr's Dispatches," and
the book won Russia's inaugural Debut Prize, which recognizes authors
who write "despite, not because of, their life circumstances." In 1995,
Arkady Babchenko was an eighteen-year-old law student in Moscow when he
was drafted into the Russian army and sent to Chechnya. It was the
beginning of a torturous journey from naïve conscript to hardened
soldier that took Babchenko from the front lines of the first Chechen
War in 1995 to the second in 1999. He fought in major cities and tiny
hamlets, from the bombed-out streets of Grozny to anonymous mountain
villages. Babchenko takes the raw and mundane realities of war--the
constant cold, hunger, exhaustion, filth, and terror--and twists it into
compelling, haunting, and eerily elegant prose. Acclaimed by reviewers
around the world, this is a devastating first-person account of war by
an extraordinary storyteller.