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Reviewed by K.C. Finn for Readers' Favorite
The Weight of Paper Cranes: A Novella of Survival and Dignity in Ukraine by Barry Robbins is a story where twenty-three neighbors find themselves bonded by hope in a basement shelter beneath war-torn Kharkiv. As bombs reduce their city to rubble, they form an unlikely family. Twelve-year-old Alina dreams of rebuilding through her sketches of soaring buildings, while Daniil imagines rockets escaping to worlds free of war. Olena Kozlov grieves over her son, lost at Bakhmut, yet quietly cares for those around her. Meanwhile, Mr. Petrov folds a paper crane each day, a fragile but defiant symbol of hope. Through their voices, the novella captures the beauty of human dignity and connection, even in the face of unspeakable loss.
Author Barry Robbins has a real talent for character portrayal and exploring human psychology, and he uses it here to paint an intimate and heartbreaking portrait of wartime resilience through these deeply felt characters. It’s incredible how much depth and power there is in this novella, but the poetically-styled prose captures both the horror and hope of survival with haunting beauty. It’s equally impressive to see so many people who are well-rounded as characters in a shorter piece. This use of individual perspectives gives the story a powerful, multi-dimensional emotional depth as we see the different effects of war and how they come together in the most devastating combinations. There are many different uses of symbolism and metaphor throughout the narrative that are highly successful too, not least the titular symbolism of the paper cranes that make for a poignant representation of hope amid total devastation. This gives the characters and the reader a lot to cling to. Overall, The Weight of Paper Cranes is a concise and powerful read that I would certainly recommend to fans of realistic and emotionally grounded novellas.