A poignant coming-of-age story with the sensitivity and haunting power of What Belongs to You and Swimming in the Dark, about a young boy wrestling with his sexuality as war breaks out in modern Ukraine.
In many ways, twelve-year-old Artem’s life in Chernihiv, Ukraine, is normal. He spends his days helping on his grandfather’s sunflower farm, drawing in his sketchbook—a treasured gift from his father, who works in America—and swimming in the river with his little brother, Yuri. In secret, Artem has begun wrestling with romantic feelings for his best friend, Viktor. In a country where love between two boys is unthinkable, Artem has begun to worry that growing up, his life will never be normal.
Then, on a February night, Artem and Yuri are woken by explosions—the beginning of a war that will tear their life in two. The invading Russians destroy their home, killing their mother and grandfather, and leaving young Artem and Yuri to fend for themselves. Fleeing in hopes of somehow reuniting with their father, the brothers traverse the country their ancestors once fought and died for, with nothing but their backpacks and each other. Surrounded by death and destruction, Artem is certain of one thing—that whatever may come, he must keep himself and his brother alive.
A harrowing and gorgeous tale of love, identity, lost innocence, and survival set in a time of devastating war, The Sunflower Boys is a powerful, heartrending exploration of young queer love, the Ukrainian spirit, and a family’s struggle to survive.
Nothing could make last week’s obsequious spectacle in Alaska more shocking, but while President Donald Trump was waiting on the red carpet, clapping for an international killer, I was reading a book about the destruction of one humble family in Ukraine. For a moment, that clash between private sympathy and public sycophancy cast the world in a light almost too harsh to endure.
With “The Sunflower Boys,” Sam Wachman, a writer all of 25 years old, has created that rarest phenomenon: a war novel that feels at once timeless and precisely of the moment. Inspired in part by stories he heard while volunteering at a camp for Ukrainian children in Romania, Wachman’s book contains no trumpet blast of military strategy, no parchment of international politics. Instead, in these pages, we confront the horrors that Vladimir Putin unleashed as they’re experienced by a frightened 12-year-old boy named Artem. His narration is more revealing about the costs of this brutal invasion than any numbing tally of casualties could ever be.
A bloody fissure in recent history accounts for the cleft structure of “The Sunflower Boys.” Throughout the long opening section, Artem describes the simple joys and anxieties of his life in Chernihiv, a city in northern Ukraine that will feel surprisingly foreign and familiar to American readers. With big-sibling equanimity, Artem tolerates the demands of his 8-year-old brother, Yuri. He misses their Tato (father), who has been working in the United States for so long that he can barely remember the man, but he adores the art supplies sent from abroad. And he tries, most days, to stay on the right side of his hilariously stern seventh-grade teacher....
Thank you Harper Books for sending me a free advance copy!
THE SUNFLOWER BOYS by Sam Wachman caught my eye because the story takes place in Ukraine and follows a boy, Artem, whose world is turned upside down when Russia launches a full-scale invasion of his country. We watched the news in horror back in 2022 but time and other tragic events have pushed this war from the forefront of many of our minds. This story serves as a reminder that people are still suffering, lives destroyed and lost. While the author uses creative license with the characters, he captures the experiences of Ukrainians during this senseless war.
A coming of age novel for a few reasons . You have a child forced to grow up due to horrific circumstances and is put in survival mode. Artem is also questioning his sexuality and struggles with the feelings he has towards his best friend. A stunning debut novel that has a mix of heartbreaking and beautiful moments. I burst into tears after I finished the book as it was such an emotional read and I needed some form of release.
I won this book through a Goodreads giveaway in exchange for an honest review. Thanks to Harper for choosing me.
Even before I started reading this book, I knew without a doubt that it was going to shatter my soul. I was still drawn to it and I was fully invested in the story, utterly consumed by it. From beginning to end. If I could, I’d give this book an infinite number of stars. ♾️⭐
The relationship between Artem and Yuri is pure and wholesome. Yuri’s innocence is a breath of fresh air the entire journey. Watching them together, having each other’s backs and taking care of the other was beautiful. Viktor and Artem’s friendship is pure and untainted until suddenly they reach a point of no return and although they drift apart for a time eventually their friendship prevails – their brotherhood is solidified. Watching them come back to one another was magical. The relief was palpable for both boys.
Sam Wachman does an incredible job of transporting his readers to Ukraine. I spent time inside a treehouse with two young boys whose friendship was their entire world. I spent time with them under the cover of night as they watched horror movies while Titka Natasha and Dyadko Sasha slept in the other room. I walked beside Mama as she did the best she could to care for her boys. I spent quality time with Did Pasha in the Sunflower fields as he taught his grandchildren who they were as he shared his life story with them. I sat on the windowsill with Artem and Yuri and smiled along with them as they strengthened their bond. I felt the fear, the worry, the confusion and the pain as two boys had their childhood extinguished within the confines of a toy chest in mere seconds. I traveled alongside the brothers as they ran for their lives, hoping to survive the atrocity they had just been forced to witness. I felt their grief, their heartache and their eventual relief when they were re-united with Tato. He made me feel like I was running beside them, hopping on the train with them, sitting right by their side as it made its way across Ukraine to safe harbor. I witnessed the bravery it took for Artem to openly be who he is, for him to take care of Yuri, and finally to take the steps to take care of himself. There’s a moment between Titka Natasha and Artem that will stay with me forever. It seems that a mother always knows exactly what a son needs to hear at the exact right moment and I felt as if I was sitting right there with her in that moment.
My heart is in shambles, I haven’t been able to stop the tears and yet out of their tragedy comes one of the most beautiful books I’ve ever had the opportunity to read- I will be forever grateful that I was picked to read this book. It deals with the heaviest of topics – war, sexual identity, death and grief. It also shows us the other side of that – love, bravery, finding yourself, acceptance, brotherhood and friendship.
Did Pasha, Tato, Mama, Dyadko Sasha, Titka Natasha, Viktor, Yuri and Artem have all burrowed their way into my heart. I know for a fact that I will never be able to forget any of them. Their story has been etched permanently onto my soul.
Although it’s fiction, this book can be and is many people’s reality. I can go on and on about all the reasons this book is amazing, but no words that come to mind do it justice. I will say to go into it prepared to be torn to pieces again and again, and walk into it with your heart open. It will break your heart and also fill it to the brim with so much love. It overflows on every page throughout the book even when you think there’s no way love could be present in that moment, the pain I feel is completely worth it to know Artem Vovchenko.
There are two distinct books within this book: the first 1/3 realisticly describes two young brothers, Artem 12, and Yuri 9 who go to school in Chernihiv, Ukraine during 2021. And just like Ukraine today, a totally new book began on Feb 24, 2022 when Russia invaded.
In Part I, we see Artem realizing he likes his long-time classmate Viktor with a new sense of wanting to be near him, beyond their time as neighbors sharing meals and parents as though each were part of the other's family. Artem is great at Art while his little brother seems to be good at everything. Viktor is mediocre at school but great at being a friend that is slightly more mature that Artem.
Artem/Yuri's grandfather calls them the Sunflower Boys per their help in picking sunflower seeds when they visit his rural homestead. He is their only living grandparent. The boy's dad was a doctor in Ukraine, but barely made enough money to put food on the table, so he works in Florida, USA doing construction making substantially more pay.
The boys see their father on regular facetime type calls, but they don't fully 'know' him, since he has been gone for multiple years now. Tata (dad) comes to visit home for a short time, to rekindle their bonds better, but returns all too soon to his job in America.
I like how Ukranian words appear on almost every single page. I never needed to look any of them up, as they were used in a way that gave away their definition, or maybe even the English was quickly used as the phrase was repeated. This really helped pull me into this story.
Part II hits this book just like the real invasion of Russia did as we know today. The boy's town quickly is attacked so they all flee to their granddad's. But the war finds them there. A war atrocity/crime occurs here in the story that makes this book need to stay in the hands of readers that might be 18+ in age. Sadly, this is a very real occurrence in the war.
This event changed the book so that I knew now that ANYTHING could happen.
Everyone gets separated, but at least the Sunflower boys/brothers stay together. It is a long and cruel trek to any semblance of hot food and some safety.
This writing feels like the author lived it. The nuances of a 12 year old narrator feel like it happened yesterday, fresh in his mind. There are some adult things that Artem accomplishes, while still kicking his brother's feet under the table as a preteen might do.
I did not fully know how this book was going to end until the book actually ended. The lgbtq side of this book was interwoven at the perfect entry-level scale for 12 year old Artem that just wants to understand these feelings within himself.
There is something in Viktor's warmth that I have come to need, something in his skin and at the corners of his mouth where his lips join together. I feel it as a tug in my belly that returns every time he is near.
Be careful reader - this is NOT an adolescent lgbtq coming-out book. This is a war book about the atrocity of the invasion of Ukraine by Russia. I would recommend this book for all politicians especially. Anyone with feelings/questions about Ukraine should read this - it might get tough - but this is a small slice of the many times this similar story is being lived by real people right this moment in history.
Serious trigger warnings for anyone sensitive to war:
Each set-back feels highly realistic, and not simply a plot device. There is just enough detail to make me feel like I was right there in the story, but couldn't do anything other than observe helplessly.
There were places where I needed to stop/pause reading to catch my breath. I cried when the book ended.
This in an impressive book that I'm glad I read (considering that it scared me a couple time to almost put it down for good). The last 120 pages wouldn't let me take my eyes off the pages until it concluded!
5* and onto my all-time-favorite shelf for being a book that will stick in my mind forever.
*This was an ARC Goodreads Giveaway* What an incredible story and beautifully written. It begins with life before the war and dealing with emerging adulthood and sexuality, describing a beautiful place that I wish I had or will have a chance to visit. The stories of the war and becoming a refugee were gripping, and then Artem coming to America and trying to adjust in a classroom made me think of some of my own refugee students and what they've had to navigate. I cried. Recommend to anyone and everyone.
Read the Wikipedia entry for the book at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sun... because it quotes some fabulous reviews and provides some great background. I will definitely have to read this novel.
Wow. This book is written with so much heart. Experiencing it through the perspective of a Ukrainian youth makes the story hit even harder. It’s raw, it’s tender, and it’s unflinchingly honest.
It doesn’t shy away from the reality of war or the weight of loss, yet somehow there’s still light in the laughter, in the friendships, in brotherhood and in the small moments of hope. It feels like a reminder of resilience, and of the cost and strength of growing up in the shadow of conflict.
This book is an amazing debut. The beginning chapters are gentle and even a little slow, like the life of the boy who tells the story, Artem. The writing is fairly simple in this part as we're getting to know the characters. Then, just as his life shifts abruptly when the Russians bomb his Ukrainian city, the book takes an abrupt and horrifying shift into a story of war, survival, and loss. The terror and desperation are visceral, and you feel like you are taking every step with Artem as he tries to find safety. Yet, in the midst of war, it's a story of the spark of first love as well as the intense, unwavering connection between two brothers. The writing becomes gritty, evocative, and profound. I wasn't sure how I'd fare with it when I was in the midst of its quiet beginning, but in the end I was blown away at the author's powerful, intense storytelling. Via this effective juxtaposition, the author conveys a very important, very human story of a horrible world event.
My heart is hurting, I cried so hard reading this and now my head is hurting too. It is about war, so it is brutal. There is loss, anger, grief, pain. And our main character is just a kid who tries to figure out his sexuality and suddenly the war starts. I loved him and his relationship with his little brother, it felt so magical. I was surprised when I learned that this is the author's debut book, cause the writing is really beautiful. I gave four stars, because sometimes I felt like something is lacking in the plot but it was still good. Lots of thanks to the author who made me sob at the midnight.
Challenging to rate. The first half of the book was so beautiful and quiet and lovely, and though I loved being swept up in the prose, I did find myself thinking "I wish we had some kind of stakes pushing us forward here." The second half is very different from the first, switching almost entirely to a narrative about surviving the Russian invasion. It's well-written and harrowing, but it robs us of most of the story elements that engaged me in the first half, almost like this was a separate novel tenuously soldered onto the other one. Near the end, some of these elements return, so I was hopeful the book would stick the landing, but it putters out unsatisfyingly after having written itself into a corner. Still, an enjoyable read and one that I would recommend to others.
I almost DNFed this, Part One reads like a child's book. To be fair, the narrator is a 12 yr old boy, but I dug deep into my reservoir of patience (my old problem), and everything changed when the dread became manifest.
This young writer had me in the palm of his hand, the only 20 something year old that isn't a son of mine who has ever made me cry. Sob. Twice.
A page turning, moving and compelling coming of age story of identity, sexuality and responsibility in a time of war. This is an author I'm very excited to read more from.
I read several reviews first, so going into this I knew that there would probably be parts of this book where I’d need to have a box of tissues nearby. But the reviews were so good that I still wanted to read it.
Artem and Viktor are best friends. They sit together at school, ride bikes together, and often have sleepovers. They live in the same neighborhood and their parents are good friends as well. They both start to realize that the way they feel towards each other is more than just a close friendship. But at 12 years old, it’s a lot to process and understand. They are also in a part of the world that is still very homophobic.
I was expecting this to be a gay coming of age story, and to an extent it was. But it was really more about Artem and his younger brother, Yuri just trying to survive as Russia invades Ukraine. At just 12, Artem had to take on the care taking role as a war was breaking out and cities were being destroyed. I think that loose comps for this book would be In Memoriam and The Song of Achilles.
While reading this, my heart truly ached for the Ukrainian people. Although this is fiction, it felt like kind of a memoir of someone revealing what happened and how they survived. The fact that this just happened in 2022 also made it feel more real. We’ve all seen the Ukraine invasion in the news, but reading about it like this from someone going through it is completely different. Parts of this were difficult to read, but reading things like this are how we as humans develop empathy.
Although he doesn’t read at all, I wish that Donald Trump would read this book. It might make him reconsider the way he idolizes Putin.
Bekommt 4,5 Sterne von mir. Meine Vater hat sehr von dem Buch geschwärmt, also dachte ich mir: lets give it a try. Bewegende Story und schönes Konzept mit den Kapiteln und Überschriften.
Sam Wachman’s “The Sunflower Boys” is a moving and beautifully written story that really pulls you in with its atmosphere and characters. The early scenes of Artem’s life in Ukraine—helping on his grandfather’s farm, swimming with his little brother, quietly falling for his best friend Viktor—are full of warmth and small, tender moments. The relationship between the boys is handled with a lot of care and sensitivity, and the bond between Artem and Yuri as they try to survive after war breaks out is heartbreaking and full of love. It’s a story that balances softness and devastation in a way that really sticks with you.
The book does a great job showing what it feels like to grow up too fast—especially when childhood is cut short by something as terrifying as war. The writing is often beautiful and emotional, and it paints a clear picture of Artem’s inner world, full of confusion, hope, and quiet strength. Even in the bleakest moments, there are glimmers of love and humanity that keep you hooked.
That said, the tone is a bit uneven at times. Artem is supposed to be twelve, but the way he thinks and speaks sometimes feels much older—more like a seasoned teenager or even an adult. It’s an odd mix of YA and adult, which can take you out of the story. Despite that mismatch, the book is an enlightening read that blends young queer love, family, and survival in a way that’s both emotional and unforgettable. Thank you to Netgalley and Harper for the ARC.
Normally, mismatched marketing does not bother me, but I think that The Sunflower Boys was not marketed correctly. I’m a big fan of Swimming in the Dark and What Belongs to You so I approached The Sunflower Boys with similar expectations. Although I understand the comparisons, this book differs significantly from the other two previously mentioned works.
I think the first-person narration style makes this book read like a YA novel. That’s absolutely okay, but the novels that are referenced in the description do not read like a YA novel at all. Also, I would have preferred third-person narration for this story because first-person narration seems inauthentic at times. For example, this quote:
“And I say nothing, because I understand his reasoning, but I can’t accept his absolution.”
I am dubious that the narrator would make this statement. I think a third-person narrator could have delivered this statement in a way that would feel more logical instead of the narrator telling us that’s how he feels.
Alas, I think this story is powerful and I really appreciated some of the imagery (especially the mountain scenes). The characters are vivid and memorable. The beginning drags, but the second half was more engaging. Overall, outstanding debut.
The Sunflower Boys by Sam Wachman is one of the most moving books I have ever read. The way the author tells the story of two brothers and their experiences with war, family, love, and life is truly beautiful. This book was tough to get through at times because it shows so clearly what innocent people went through when the war in Ukraine began. From the first pages, you see the characters' daily lives, their kindness, and then the pain and loss that comes with war. I felt every emotion while reading.
It's important to remember that this book is not historical fiction. The events it describes are still happening in Ukraine today. People are still being mistreated, forced from their homes, and killed because of Putin's orders. This book is timely and matters right now.
I love this book and I love the characters! If you can, please read this book; it is truly a masterpiece.
Such a turn into the impacts of war on a family and a young child from the beautiful way it gets set up as a traditional gay coming of age story. The youthful narrator and POV is something that I think makes you feel this story to its fullest. I don’t think you can read this story and not understand/empathize with all the victims of war past and present. Loved it.
Sam Wachman taught English in Ukraine and when the war started he continued to teach English but in refugee camps in Romania. As a teacher he began compiling stories of his students both before and during the war. He began writing his book before the war, but it changed significantly once the war started.
“Don’t be sad,” he tells us. “This is not a land of war and sorrow. This is your country, sunflower boys. The dirt and the sky and everything in between. It’s your inheritance. It all belongs to you.”
Artem and Yuri are brothers who live with their mother while their father lives and works in the United States sending money home to them. The author builds the story of the brothers and Artem's best friend Viktor as carefree youth. Artem and Viktor are approaching puberty. Artem's parents have tasked him with caring for his younger brother Yuri.
Wachman builds the story slowly so the reader has a real sense of life in a small town in Ukraine in which the boys are free to explore the countryside. We read a significant portion of the book before the war starts, but we know what might happen.
This is a debut novel and I think Wachman has some skills which need further development.
It did me much to ponder over and I will remember those characters.
The narration of this book is so well done. The Sunflower Boys is a story of recent history (2020-2022) about a young boy, Artem, who lives in Ukraine during Putin's invasion. I thought the book had such a nice balance to it between light-hearted family moments, where you are introduced to Artem and his family, you get to witness the loving relationship he has with his younger brother, Yuri, and you get insight into the internal struggles Artem is working through around his feelings for his best friend, Viktor; and then the more heavy and serious moments of the onset of war and the destruction, deaths, and trauma that they experience. The impact the war has on Artem and his family, the destruction that happens resulting in isolation and terror, it left me feeling hurt, angry, and sad on behalf of this family and on behalf of victims of war.
This is a phenomenal and impactful read that I highly recommend, and I am stunned that this is a debut novel by an incredibly gifted young author. Sam Wachman is definitely an author I will be following closely.
A brilliant and chillingly realistic debut! The first portion focuses on 12 year-old Artem, a protagonist who deeply loves his working-class family and community, while internally struggling with the onset of puberty and his attraction to his best friend. Never before have I read a book that illustrated the constant denial and repression, heteronormative microaggressions, and cycle of shame so well, evoking my own 6th and 7th grade. And then without warning -mirroring real life- war takes over and in a few mere pages, tragedy strikes the central characters a vivid world had been built around. Through the eyes of a child, the hopeless reality of a war-torn country are depicted, serving as the best argument for pacifism. The final chapters serve as an epilogue after the miraculous plight, subverting the reader's expectation by delving further into the complicated truth of grief and distance. I would love to read a sequel, with perhaps a newly adult Artem returning to Ukraine after the war!
Someone once said that fiction is a lie that tells a truth. In the case of The Sunflower Boys that truth is about what it is like to experience the trauma of war first hand. When the novel opens, we meet Artem, 12 years old, and his younger brother, Yuri. They live with their mother in Ukraine while their father works in the US to provide a better life for them. The first 1/3 of the book feels like a normal coming of age story that incorporates Artem's awareness of his own sexuality. Wachman did an exceptional job of putting you into the headspace of a 12 year old boy. When the bombing starts, it feels completely unexpected and everything changes as the family flees for safety. The last 2/3 of the book is the story of Artem and Yuri and their struggle to survive. It's a harrowing and brutal depiction of the horrors of war and the desperation of trying to hold on to what matters most. So many of the novels I have read about war are historical - this is contemporary and scenarios like this are happening now. While the novel feels deeply personal, as a reader it reminds me of the imperative need for the US to support Ukraine.
Sam Wachman’s tender and insightful rendering of a boy’s experience of war on the cusp of puberty brought me to places I didn’t expect to visit, both geographically and within my own internal landscape.
12-year-old Artem is spared nothing when his homeland is brutally invaded one February morning. Nothing in this account is romanticized or glossed over, and adult readers are keenly aware of much that Artem is unable to parse or process in the agonizing moments when he is forced to make painful and consequential decisions.
Each short chapter deftly and sensitively reveals Artem’s world to us, as seen through a tween’s eyes, and Wachman’s virtuosity affords readers a view of Ukraine and its people that is both vivid and indelible. Its mountains and rivers, mothers and grandfathers, cities and grocery stores, steadily become familiar and beloved as we walk in Artem and Yuri’s footsteps. How can we miss a country we’ve never visited? How can we yearn for rivers whose waters we’ve yet to drink?
Wachman’s writing bridges the gap between the unknowable and the possible, the foreign and the familiar, navigating pathways between despair and hope. The Sunflower Boys is many things, but above all, it is a testament to Love and Humanity that I hope will remain with me forever.
I’m always going to be partial to a war story, and this one was excellent. What begins as a coming of age and exploration of sexuality story turns into the experience of a young teenager as war quickly invades his country. Artem and his brother Yuri live with their mother in Ukraine while their dad awaits a green card in the US, and Artem develops a best friendship with Victor, whose family becomes an extension of his own. We see Artem and Victor begin to grapple with their feelings for one another just as Russia invades Ukraine for the second half of the book. The first half was a little slow, though tense because of what I knew was coming. The brutalities of war, the end of childhood and innocence, and the ripping apart of families the war caused were vividly on the page. This is a war story, but also a story of brothers and of friendship. I loved it.
One of two things happens when I read a book told from a child's perspective: 1. I relate to the story and forget the narrator is a child or 2. I find it difficult to empathize with the narrator because it feels like he is constantly whining and irrational. I know that's literally the definition of a child but a good story should speak to a broad audience and not just other children. There are great moments in this book. The author does a good job detailing relationships between the children and their family and friends and how their lives change when the war starts. Americans know some of the facts regarding the war in Ukraine but having people attached to it makes it more real. The book drags on. The ending is not satisfying. A good effort that doesn't quite hit the mark.
This book is pretty intense. I read several summaries that made me half expect something that little attention was given. For most of the.book it is a good read which is artfully written. The ending came very abruptly and I didn’t think it was particularly good one.
I neither loved it or hated it. I would suggest people read other reviews before they decide to read it or not.