<p>‘Of the three ways of observing – as witness, whose meticulous, dispassionate descriptions become the fabric of the past; as voyeur, devouring the sight of the present with limitless appetite; as seer, finding in the now intimations of things to come – Jonathan Littell chooses all three at once. He doesn’t flinch from the bare, intimate detail of Russia’s visitation of death and destruction on Ukraine. Although sometimes the reader might prefer it if he did, it’s not because Littell’s visions are naked of euphemism, but because it falls to the reader themself to clothe these events in meaning. With his companion d’Agata, Littell, so fascinated by monuments, has made one with this book.’<br /> — James Meek, author of <em>To Calais, In Ordinary Times</em></p>
<p>‘In <em>An Inconvenient Place</em>, Jonathan Littell takes us on a journey into the most disturbing of modern human landscapes, from the jumble of horrors that were the ravines of Babyn Yar, into the cellars of Bucha. In chiselled, uncompromising prose, accompanied by haunting photographs by Antoine d’Agata, Littell’s unforgettable account is nothing less than a moral triumph over the willful amnesia imposed on history’s savageries by its perpetrators.’<br /> — Jon Lee Anderson, author of <em>Che Guevara</em></p>
<p>‘An impressionistic rather than analytical book, it is not intended as a definitive account of Ukraine’s recent history. That will be for historians to provide, and Jonathan Littell knows how quickly words can be reduced to irrelevance. He and Antoine d’Agata have produced an insightful and frequently terrifying document whose reflections on depravity and resilience are likely to prove durable, come what may.’<br /> — Luke Warde, <em>Times Literary Supplement</em></p>
<p>‘A narrative, both arduous and luminous, that takes every possible route through a history mired in tragedy.‘<br /> — <em>Télérama</em><br /> </p>
<p>‘What makes this powerful book so impressive is that it confronts everything – to the point of veering off course, of travelling far back into the past, of accumulating the twists, the strata, of narrative, image and investigation. At once a historical study, a testimony of the events unfolding as you read these lines, an inquiry into war crimes and a remembrance of the dead, it comes as close as possible to what its authors came to seek in the streets of Ukraine.’<br /> — <em>Le Monde</em></p>
<p>‘An important chronicle of the enigma of violence and evil, and the tragedy of the Ukrainian people.’<br /> — <em>France Inter</em><br /> </p>
<p>‘Littell and d’Agata, true aesthetes of disaster, document the history of the violence that stalks the fate of the Ukrainian people, now terrorized by the Russian army. The beauty of the book, embedded in its very tragedy, lies in its way – at once delicate and direct – of placing the ashes of this blood-streaked land into a literary urn, where nothing is forgotten, where everything captures the appalled gaze.’<br /> — <em>Les Inrockuptibles</em><br /> </p>
<p>‘A singular and disturbing work that ties text to image… <em>An Inconvenient Place</em> examines the war in Ukraine and draws its power from the interplay between the words of writer Jonathan Littell and the haunting images of photographer Antoine d’Agata.’<br /> — <em>L’Obs</em><br /> </p>
<p>‘Littell excels at saying the unsayable, almost to a fault. <em>An Inconvenient</em> <em>Place</em> demands attentive reading; it battles against silence and oblivion.’<br /> — <em>Le Figaro Littéraire</em></p>
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Jonathan Littell was born in New York, and grew up in France. He now lives in Spain. His best-known novel, The Kindly Ones, was originally published in French in August 2006, and won the most prestigious literary prize in France, the Prix Goncourt, as well as the Académie Française’s Grand Prix de Littérature. He has since published books on Chechnya, Syria, Francis Bacon, as well as a novel and several novellas. He has written for Le Monde, the Guardian and the London Review of Books.