Deux années en Ukraine (1917-1919) by Charles Dubreuil
Charles Dubreuil's Deux années en Ukraine is a firsthand account from the eye of a hurricane. As a French officer, he arrived in Ukraine in 1917, just as the Russian Empire was collapsing. His mission, part of the Allied effort, became incredibly messy as the region exploded into conflict.
The Story
The book follows Dubreuil's two-year posting. He doesn't give us a neat, top-down view of the war. Instead, we see it through his daily experiences: negotiating with Cossack hetmans one week, dodging Bolshevik patrols the next, and trying to figure out the goals of the Ukrainian National Republic. The narrative moves from diplomatic meetings in Odessa to frozen trenches, from the chaos of Kiev's changing governments to the stark reality of village life. The central thread is his struggle to complete his military objectives in a place where the front lines, the politics, and the very idea of the nation changed almost daily.
Why You Should Read It
What makes this book special is its ground-level perspective. History often flattens this period into dates and treaties. Dubreuil puts you in the mud and snow. You feel his frustration with unclear orders from afar, his cautious respect for some local fighters, and his alarm at the brutality he witnesses. He doesn't pretend to have all the answers. His observations on the Ukrainian people's desire for independence are particularly striking, seen not as an abstract idea but in the faces of the soldiers and civilians he met. It’s a human-scale look at a gigantic historical event.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect read for anyone who finds standard history books too dry. If you like personal narratives that bring the past to life, like a soldier's diary or an explorer's journal, you'll be captivated. It's essential for those interested in Ukrainian history, the aftermath of World War I, or military memoirs. You don't need to be an expert—Dubreuil was just as confused as a modern reader might be, and that's what makes his story so powerful and genuine.
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Sarah Taylor
10 months agoFive stars!
Mason Flores
7 months agoWow.
Thomas Lewis
1 year agoFrom the very first page, the plot twists are genuinely surprising. Exactly what I needed.