<i>Philipovna: The Daughter of Sorrow</i> is a creative non-fiction based on the author's mother’s surviving the holodomor [the Ukrainian starvation] in the early 1930’s. It is the story of an orphan who goes to live with her aunt in a rural village in the Ukrainian countryside. The aunt swears on her dead sister’s Bible that Vera Philipovna will survive no matter what might befall the family. No one foresees the horrors that they will have to face between the fall of 1930 and the spring of 1933. In the end, out of a healthy extended family, only Philipovna, a cousin and the aunt survive. The acts of real savagery that are perpetrated on the village are unflinchingly narrated by a pre-pubescent girl, who also gives us a good grasp of the beauty and richness of the Ukrainian culture with its superstitions, customs and celebrations. From the author: 'The story is one of resilience and survival.It is my attempt to restore the voice of a generation that has been silenced and buried.It is a conflation of my mother’s stories, years of detailed research and my own insight of a child having to face adult challenges long before she is ready.'