Malgorzata (Margo) Rejmer (b. 1985) is a graduate of cultural studies at the University of Warsaw. In 2009, her first full-length novel, Toksymia, was published. In 2013, she wrote Bucharest: Dust and Blood, for which she was nominated for Polityka Passport in 2013. Mud Sweeter than Honey is her fourth book. She is now working on a follow-up reportage about contemporary Albania.
"A moving evocation of the 'everyday terror' systematically
perpetrated over 41 years of Albanian communism. The author brings
together survivors' accounts of life under Albania's ruthless
dictator, Enver Hoxha. Despite the inevitable bleakness, the
author's skillful interviewing allows those recounting their
experiences to engage us in their absorbing narratives. An
illuminating if harrowing insight into life in a totalitarian
state.
*author of ALBANIA: PORTRAIT OF A COUNTRY IN TRANSITION*
Beautifully researched, the book brings back to life sufferings and
hopes of traumatized families and individuals that fell victim to
the heartless cogwheels of a totalitarian regime. It will help a
younger generation who has not lived under Communism to understand
the past, and inspire them to work to build a better future
*Balkan Investigative Reporting Network*
Like Nobel laureate Svetlana Alexievich, whose oral histories have
documented political oppression, Rejmer allows the voices of
everyday Albanians to reveal the privations and fear under which
they lived . . . A gripping book of starkly revealing testimony
*Kirkus Review*
In the style of Svetlana Alexievich, Margo Rejmer uses interviews
to approach the suffering of a still little-known people . . .
Rejmer's poignant book rescues memory before it fades
*El País*
Albania, enigmatic, mysterious Albania, was always the untold story
of the Cold War, the 1989 revolutions and the fall of the Berlin
Wall. Mud Sweeter Than Honey goes a very long way indeed towards
putting that right.
*New European*
[Rejmer] lets the lived experience of Albanians speak for
themselves, until the whole spectrum comes into view . . . a
seamless translation
*Asymptote Journal*
Tells, in their own words, the stories of Albanians during
communism and especially those of prisoners of the regime. One word
wrong or a friend who tries to flee and whole lives are ruined.
Rejmer's is a fine collection.
*Financial Times*
[An] incredibly moving collection of oral histories . . . important
enough, to be added to the history curriculum
*Telegraph*
A pioneering, necessary book of such uncompromising clarity that
even readers familiar with the broad outlines of Albania's recent
past are likely to find its contents shocking.
*Literary Review*
Margo Rejmer, the Polish writer who assembled this extraordinary
book, offers a 'polyphonic' account of victims of Albanian
communism in the style of Svetlana Alexievich's Chernobyl
Prayer
*Spectator*
This outstanding record of recollections of those who lived through
it makes for chilling reading . . . It is impossible to imagine a
title that better captures the squalid and sinister horror of life
in Albania under communism
*Strong Words*
Essential reading for anyone wishing to understand Communist
Albania where, whether outside or inside prison, no one was every
able to feel free
*History Today*
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