What happens when ordinary life is erased overnight?
In September 1941, as German forces closed in on Leningrad, thirty-four-year-old Elena Kochina was a teacher, wife, and mother living a comfortable life in one of the Soviet Union's great cultural centers. Within weeks, that world had vanished. Food disappeared, winter descended, and survival became a daily struggle.
Written as events unfolded, Blockade Diary is a remarkable firsthand account of the Siege of Leningrad, one of the longest and deadliest sieges in modern history. Through Kochina's candid diary entries, readers witness the devastating effects of hunger, cold, fear, and uncertainty, as well as the difficult moral choices faced by ordinary civilians trapped inside a city cut off from the outside world.
Kochina also records moments of compassion, resilience, and determination alongside scenes of despair and loss. Her observations reveal how families, neighbors, and communities adapted to unimaginable circumstances, offering an intimate portrait of human behavior under extreme pressure.
Powerful, immediate, and deeply personal, Blockade Diary stands among the most compelling civilian accounts of World War II. Essential reading for anyone interested in Russian history, World War II memoirs, women's voices in wartime, and the enduring strength of the human spirit, this unforgettable document brings one of the twentieth century's greatest humanitarian tragedies vividly to life.