Wartime Anthology

These unforgettable pieces ask us to confront war, to acknowledge all that is destroyed by it. Chris Abani, who was imprisoned three times by the Nigerian government, makes us understand, in a frightening yet tender poem, that he has indeed “seen too much.” Ellen Bass pierces the heart with her ode to all the children lost in the Gaza conflict: “It could be me / there with a dead baby.” In a quieter mode, Benjamin Alire Sáenz writes of communing with trees as a way of coping with sorrow. Olga Zilberbourg, a Russian native, expresses her grief over the Ukraine war while detailing the terror of living in an oppressive regime.


At a time when the world is roiled by conflict, we need works like these more than ever. We need to keep reading them.


  • Chris Abani

    Say Something about Child’s Play

    2009 Best of the Net Finalist
    This boy says: Take my right eye, it has seen too much.

  • Ellen Bass

    Pale Blue Vein

    I thought the pain of the other was not like my pain.

  • Mehul Bhagat

    Homeland

    The place you’re returning to is rife with betrayal.

  • Marcella Hunyadi

    Budapest 1984

    The officer’s arm rose and swung toward me like a bat.

  • Daniel Mason

    The Winter Soldier

    2020 Joyce Carol Oates Prize
    “A case of severe coccygeal ichthyoidization.”

  • Ned Parker

    The Oil Sheikh

    2006 Narrative Prize Winner
    “I’m serving my country. Oil is our national treasure.”

  • Benjamin Alire Sáenz

    Do Not Mind the Bombs

    The wars are everywhere. I’ll plant another tree.

  • S.L. Wisenberg

    Bad Girl in Berlin

    Switzerland wouldn’t give Jews asylum, not then.

  • Tobias Wolff

    Soldier’s Joy

    I could shoot you and nobody would say boo.

  • Olga Zilberbourg

    Quieter Than Water, Lower Than Grass: Growing Up Afraid in Russia

    I have spent most of my life afraid of violence.