Part memoir and part reckoning, this is a startling examination of the legacy of the Bosnian war published on the twenty-first anniversary of the outbreak of the war.
Ed Vulliamy is a journalist and writes for the Guardian and Observer. For his work in Bosnia, Italy, the US and Iraq he has won a James Cameron Award and an Amnesty International Media Award and has been named International Reporter of the Year (twice) and runner-up at the Foreign Press Association Awards. In 1996 he became the first journalist to testify at an international crimes court, at the International Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia. Twitter- @edvulliamy
The camps and their corrosive legacy are Vulliamy's subject in this
searing book, in which he writes with controlled and righteous
anger about the absence of any "reckoning" * Daily Telegraph *
Impassioned ... riveting and chilling * Financial Times *
Haunting * Sunday Times *
A beautifully written and deeply heartfelt study in survival *
Sunday Business Post *
A stark and brilliant testimony about a massive human atrocity *
Sunday Business Post *
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