You know this story — the whole world does. It’s the story of the siege of Mariupol, one of the first cities to fall victim to Russia at the start of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. You learned about it thanks to the journalists who chose to stay in the city during those first 20 days, documenting the horror unfolding on the streets, in basements, and in hospital wards.
Evgeniy Maloletka was among those photographing tank strikes on residential buildings, the birth and death of children, and moments beyond what any human being should ever have to witness, capturing one of the most haunting chapters of modern history.
This book is about people — and about a journalist’s responsibility: to tell their truth and to stay connected to it. It’s also about what it means to be in that moment — when the city is surrounded and the enemy is searching for you; what it means to press the shutter when a father weeps over his dead son; what it means to see the unimaginable and keep the camera steady.
About the authors

Evgeniy Maloletka
A photojournalist who has been documenting the war in Ukraine since 2014. He is a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner (2023) in Public Service and Breaking News Photography, and the recipient of the World Press Photo: Photo of the Year (2023) for his image from the Mariupol maternity hospital. His work has also been recognised with numerous other international awards.

Myroslav Laiuk
A writer and war documentarian, and a lecturer at the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy. He is the author of several novels and poetry collections, including Baborniа, Iron Water, Osote!, and Metrophobia, as well as the nonfiction books The Lists and Bakhmut. His book Bakhmut received the Yuri Shevelyov Prize (2024) and was shortlisted for the BBC Book of the Year (2024) and The Peterson Literary Prize (2024).
Reviews
Through the lens of a journalist’s camera, faces, objects, and moments are captured instantly and precisely — we witness this war, the one Russia launched against us, almost in real time. For years now, day after day, we’ve followed this steady advance of pain and death.
Serhiy Zhadan, writer and translator
And yet, even a camera cannot fully convey the despair and hope felt by the person behind it — the one documenting reality, trying to hold onto it through the viewfinder. A journalist, a witness, an eyewitness — they, too, need to speak, to tell their story, to comment on their images.
Evgeniy does this simply, honestly, and openly. It hurts to read. But through that pain, a light emerges — the light of eventual return, the light of future life.
Here is war in all its horror and surprising humanity. Here is life, death, and the sheer weirdness of how the stuff of every day co-exists with epic tragedy.
Peter Pomerantsev, journalist, author and TV producer
I met Evgeniy Maloletka at the premiere of 20 Days in Mariupol and was instantly humbled. Few of us could ever match the courage he, Mstyslav Chernov, and Vasilisa Stepanenko showed by staying in a scorched, imploding city when every other reporter had fled.
Christo Grozev, investigative journalist and author
In The Siege of Mariupol, we are granted something only an exceptional photojournalist with an unerring eye for the essential could deliver. Evgeniy recounts the war’s beginning with a knife-edge clarity that cuts through smoke and moral fog, drawing us into the city’s trembling heart — where life, death, fear, and duty coexist.
“Are you the journalist who stayed?” a local asks amid the ruins. He was. And because he stayed, we all bear witness.





