Military conflicts of recent years often seem confusing and hard to understand. Everyone has their own truth, and only a direct participant can truly grasp what is happening. The author of the book “Kosovo 99”—Alexander Loban tsev, a Russian paratrooper, one of the two hundred servicemen who took part in the military conflict in Yugoslavia—offers a unique documentary testimony of the role of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in maintaining the balance of forces during the conflict in the Balkan Peninsula in 1999. The author was directly involved at a turning point in the war—the capture and holding of an airfield in Priština. The book gives much attention to the description of the life and relationships between servicemen and local residents. The author describes only what he saw himself and what he knows, analyzing and comparing facts. For this reason, the documentary value of the novel is very high. Minimal technical and specialized terminology makes listening to the audiobook “Kosovo 99” easy and interesting.