Ian Buruma is editor of The New York Review of Books. His previous books include Their Promised Land, Year Zero, The China Lover, Murder in Amsterdam, Occidentalism, God's Dust, Behind the Mask, The Wages of Guilt, Bad Elements, and Taming the Gods.
“Year Zero . . . covers a great deal of history without minimizing
the complexity of the events and the issues. It is well written and
researched, full of little-known facts and incisive political
analysis. What makes it unique among hundreds of other works
written about this period is that it gives an overview of the
effects of the war and liberation, not only in Europe, but also in
Asia . . . A stirring account of the year in which the world woke
up to the horror of what had just occurred and—while some new
horrors were being committed—began to reflect on how to make sure
that it never happens again.” —Charles Simic, The New York
Review of Books
“Ian Buruma’s lively new history, Year Zero, is about the various
ways in which the aftermath of the Good War turned out badly for
many people, and splendidly for some who didn’t deserve it. It is
enriched by his knowledge of six languages, a sense of personal
connection to the era (his Dutch father was a forced laborer in
Berlin) and his understanding of this period from a book he wrote
two decades ago that is still worth reading, The Wages of Guilt:
Memories of War in Germany and Japan.” —Adam Hochschild, The
New York Times Book Review
“[Buruma is] one of those rare historian-humanists who bridge East
and West . . . Year Zero has a down-to-earth grandeur. Through an
array of brief, evocative human portraits and poignant descriptions
of events around the globe he hints, rather than going into numbing
detail or philosophical discourse, at the dimensions of suffering,
the depth of moral confusion and in the end the nascent hope that
1945 entailed . . . Year Zero is a remarkable book, not because it
breaks new ground, but in its combination of magnificence and
modesty.” —Wall Street Journal
“[Buruma] displays a fine grasp of the war’s scope and aftermath.
Little conventional wisdom survives Mr. Buruma’s astringent prose.
Perhaps his most important insight is that the war was not a neat
conflict between two sides. The victors included villains, and the
vanquished were not all Nazis. On many fronts—notably
Yugoslavia—many sides were at war . . . Many of the consequences of
victory were grim. Normality returned in the decades that followed
thanks to the grit and determination of those who pushed on past
the horrors of 1945. Mr. Buruma’s book honours their
efforts.” —The Economist
“Elegant and humane . . . As generations with few memories of the
second world war come of age in Europe and Asia, this luminous book
will remind them of the importance of what Buruma terms ‘mental
surgeons’, the politicians and warriors who reconstructed two
continents left in rubble.” —Financial Times
“[A] very human history of ‘postwar 1945.’” —The New
Yorker
“[Buruma] makes a compelling case that many of the modern triumphs
and traumas yet to come took root in this fateful year of
retribution, revenge, suffering and healing.” —Smithsonian
Magazine
“After total war with millions dead and the Shoah comes what? That
is the question that propels critic and historian Ian Buruma’s
panoramic history of 1945. It is a personal story for Buruma,
inspired by his own father’s experience of the war and its
aftermath, but with Buruma’s sharp and careful eye it becomes a
window into understanding all the years since then.” —The
Daily Beast
“I’ve spent countless hours reading about trenches, tank battles,
and dogfights, but no book had yet captured what came after all
that as superbly as Ian Buruma does in Year Zero: A History of
1945. This book will change the way you think about the postwar
era, i.e. ours.” —Lucas Wittmann, The Daily Beast
“Rooted in first-person accounts—most notably, the author's own
father, a Dutch student forced into labor by the Nazis—Buruma's
compelling book manages to be simultaneously global in its scope
and utterly human in its concerns.” —Publishers Weekly
(starred review)
“[An] insightful meditation on the world’s emergence from the
wreckage of World War II. Buruma offers a vivid portrayal of the
first steps toward normalcy in human affairs amid the ruins of
Europe and Asia . . . Authoritative,
illuminating.” —Kirkus
“In 1945, the war ended, but a new world began. Taken and destroyed
cities were transformed; the liberated celebrated; scores were
settled; people starved; justice was and was not meted out;
soldiers and refugees came home; suffering ended, or continued, or
began anew. An eclectic scholar who has written on religion,
democracy, and war, Buruma presents a panoramic view of a global
transformation and emphasizes common themes: exultation, hunger,
revenge, homecoming, renewed confidence. Though there was great
cause for pessimism, many of the institutions established in the
immediate postwar period—the United Nations, the modern European
welfare state, the international criminal-justice system—reflected
profound optimism that remains unmatched. Buruma’s facility with
Asian history lends this selection a particularly internationalized
perspective. But it is the story of his father—a Dutch man who
returned home in 1945 after being forced into factory labor by the
Nazis—that sews the various pieces together and provides a moving
personal touch.” —Booklist
“A brilliant recreation of that decisive year of victory and
defeat, chaos and humiliation, concentrating on peoples, not
states. Gripping, poignant and unsparing, Year Zero is worthy of
its author in being at home in both Europe and Asia. It is a book
at once deeply empathetic and utterly fair, marked by wisdom and
great knowledge; the often personal tone inspired by the fate of
his father, a Dutchman forced into German labor camps. In the face
of so much horror, it is an astounding effort at deep
comprehension. A superb book, splendidly written.” —Fritz
Stern
“Year Zero is the founding moment of the modern era. Ian Buruma’s
history of that moment is vivid, compassionate and compelling.
Buruma weaves together a tapestry of vital themes: the exultation
and sexual liberation that came with victory, the vindictive
settling of scores that came with defeat and the longing for a
world of peace, justice and human rights after the horror of total
war. His story takes in the world: from Holland to Japan, and his
heroes and heroines are the ordinary men and women who picked up
the pieces of a broken world and put it back together for their
children and grandchildren. We are their heirs and Buruma does our
parents and grandparents justice in this magnificent
history.” —Michael Ignatieff
“A graphic account—well-researched, splendidly constructed and
stylishly written—of the hinge year of the twentieth century, of
its horrors, hopes, illusions and roots of troubles to come.
Altogether compelling—a fine achievement.” —Sir Ian
Kershaw
“Ian Buruma gives a heart-wrenching account of the horrors, the
unimaginable cruelties, and the sheer stupidities of the last
months of World War II, and the attempts to deal with them in the
first months of peace. Even after nearly seventy years, parts of
his book are still almost unbearable to read. Buruma’s Dutch father
improbably survived Nazi forced labor in Berlin, under allied air
attack, until the German surrender; this book reflects an intimacy
with the familiar dread of the forces of evil that never goes
completely away.” —Sir Brian Urquhart
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