Abstract

Reviewed by: 83 Days in Mariupol: A War Diary by Don Brown Don Brown and Kate Quealy-Gainer, Editor Brown, Don 83 Days in Mariupol: A War Diary; written and illus. by Don Brown. Clarion, 2023 [128p] Trade ed. ISBN 9780063311565 $22.99 E-book ed. ISBN 9780063311589 $10.99 Reviewed from digital galleys R* Gr. 9-12 In the most aggressive land grab by a major global power post World War II, Russian President Vladimir Putin declared a "special military operation" on February 24, 2022, with 190,000 Russian soldiers pouring into Ukraine. Most politicians and pundits believed Kyiv would fall in a matter of days; few expected the Ukrainians to resist, much less engage with and hold off Russian troops, and yet for over a year, the Ukrainians have successfully defended their country. News of bombings and destruction initially took over the headlines, and so too did a David versus Goliath narrative, rightfully positioning the Ukrainians as the smaller, more noble force against a vicious behemoth. It's an inspiring—and correct—portrayal, but its optimism has eclipsed some of the true horrors of the war, casting the events as more a movie to some, especially Westerners who have the luxury of being far from the frontlines. In this month's Big Picture, noted author/illustrator Brown offers up an intensely powerful graphic novel that humanizes an overwhelming tragedy, disabusing the reader of any notion that the invasion is anything but a still unfolding catastrophe. The book opens with a brief history of Russia and Ukraine's historical relationship, followed by an explanation that Mariupol is the highly sought after "gateway to the sea," a strategic necessity to win the war and thus the target of Russia's barrage of missiles and violence. The account then shifts fully to the experiences of that city's residents and the monstrous acts they endure until Ukrainian forces fall back in the late spring of 2022. Brown's masterful composition layers the emotional impact throughout, utilizing each element of the graphic novel format to function much like a documentary, chronicling the violence, terror, and bravery seen in the 83 days of intense battle. Text in narrative boxes is clipped, factual, like a news report or voiceover; these are the details behind the headlines, conveyed with a concise brevity that gives readers a solid, if unnerving, framework. That picture is sharpened with quotes, taken directly from newspaper and magazine interviews with citizens under siege (sourced in backmatter), appearing in dialogue bubbles, weighting the dispassionate facts with an aching, palpable grief over a home, a country irreparably damaged. The speaker often breaks the fourth wall, peering back at the reader with expressions of anger, despair, or more disturbingly, resignation, as the daily struggle for survival strips lives of safety and joy. And then, of course, there are the haunting illustrations, rendered in watercolor and ink, showing what words cannot possibly convey. Brown strategically eschews cinematic flair in favor of more spare, focused scenes, homing in on individual moments of pain that when strung together offer a relentlessly pummeling [End Page 283] visual of war. A single page of three horizonal panels, for example, show a world quickly, ruthlessly destroyed: the first box a neatly contained visual of a group of boys playing soccer, then a mess of flames and explosions tearing through the border, leaving the body of a bloodied child on a soccer field, surrounded by boys stumbling off the page in grief. In another spread, the aftermath of a brutal rape is just barely illuminated by a lightbulb, swinging from the top of the page above a Russian solder redressing as a young woman cries in the corner. Readers rarely revisit locations or hear from the same person, and while the constant change in perspective could have seemed haphazard in lesser authorial hands, Brown's movement among the people lends a purposeful intimacy to the chaos. When the action then comes to an abrupt, heartbreaking stop as Ukrainian soldiers surrender, readers understand the true scope of the tragedy beyond the final scenes' smoking buildings and scorched streets. Young people who may have seen the headlines will know this to...

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