Hukanovic's book merits a prominent place in the catologue of witness to twentieth century horror

LITERARY REVIEW

The evil of those camps has never been recorded as coherently or directly as this

OBSERVER

It is imperative to read this book... One emerges from it as from a terrible nightmare, crushed by a hatred at once ancestral and constantly present.

Elie Wiesel- from the Foreword

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Mr Hukanovic certainly deserves a place next to others who have written memorably about similar subjects: Primo Levi (the Nazi camps)

NEW YORK TIMES

On May 13 1992, the Bosnian civil war finally came to Prijedo, a once-peaceful city where Muslims, Croats and Serbs had lived side by side for centuries. The Serb occupation of Prijedor was an exercise in what the victors called 'ethnic cleansing' whereby the town's Muslim and Croat citizens were rounded up and sent to concentration camps. Among those who lived though the nightmare was the journalist Rewak Hukanovic, whose riveting memoir chronicles the crimes against humanity that were committed by the Bosnian Serbs in the death camps of Omarska and Manjaca. Through the summer and fall of that endless year, Hukanovic and his friends, colleagues, relatives and neighbours were subjected to terror , torture, and grisly death. Through his unbelieving eyes we see the patina of civilization stripped away from aggressor and victim alike, revealing a brutality that calls into question all our notions of human decency.
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*A book to compare to Primo Levi's classic account of life in a Concentration Camp - IF THIS IS A MAN. THE TENTH CIRCLE OF HELL is about life in a Serbian prison camp in 1992.
Hukanovic's book merits a prominent place in the catologue of witness to twentieth century horror
Hukanovic's book merits a prominent place in the catologue of witness to twentieth century horror - LITERARY REVIEWThe evil of those camps has never been recorded as coherently or directly as this - OBSERVERIt is imperative to read this book... One emerges from it as from a terrible nightmare, crushed by a hatred at once ancestral and constantly present. - Elie Wiesel- from the ForewordMr Hukanovic certainly deserves a place next to others who have written memorably about similar subjects: Primo Levi (the Nazi camps) - NEW YORK TIMES
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Advertising in THE OBSERVER. Possibility of Radio 3 extracts reading * Review coverage reading copies available

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780349109343
Publisert
1998
Utgiver
Vendor
Abacus
Vekt
200 gr
Høyde
202 mm
Bredde
124 mm
Dybde
14 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
176

Forfatter
Foreword by

Biographical note

Rezak Hukanovic was a poet and journalist in Prijedor, Bosnia, prior to 1992. After being released from the prison camp in November of that year, he settled temporarily in Norway, where he was reunited with his wife and two sons. He now divides his time between Germany and Bosnia.