Bad News: Last Journalists in a Dictatorship
Autor Anjan Sundaramen Limba Engleză Paperback – 11 ian 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781408866474
ISBN-10: 1408866471
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.15 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Paperbacks
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1408866471
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.15 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Paperbacks
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
A personal account of the dark workings of an African dictatorship, Bad News is a non-fiction 1984 that will appeal to readers of incredible real-life stories such as Giles Foden's The Last King of Scotland and Nothing to Envy by Barbara Demick
Notă biografică
Anjan Sundaram is an award-winning journalist who has reported from Africa for the New York Times and the Associated Press. His writing on various countries in the continent has also appeared in Granta, the Observer, Foreign Policy, Politico, Fortune and the Washington Post. He graduated from Yale and received a Reuters journalism award in 2006 for his reporting on Pygmy tribes in Congo's rain forest. in 2015 his journalism was shortlisted for the Prix Bayeux, the Frontline Club Award and a Kurt Schork Award. His first book, Stringer: A Reporter's Journey in the Congo, was published to great critical acclaim in 2014. @anjansunanjansundaram.com
Recenzii
Required reading . A superb exposé of a dictatorship as he observes how the tentacles of totalitarianism squeeze the life from a society. Bad News is an important book that should shatter any lingering faith people might hold in Kagame's hideous regime . This is a desolate work, taut prose describing the stifling atmosphere of a nation trapped in fear
Superb, timely ... It is nothing less than the best book written about Rwanda by an outsider, a massively important contribution to understanding what is one of Africa's most important, inscrutable, regimes
Powerful and shocking
Few people have suffered the hideous fate of Rwandans in the modern era. It is shocking, painful beyond words, to see the darkness settling again in a dystopia that is crushing free expression and individual lives. This searing, evocative account provides insights about the human condition that reach far beyond the tragic story of Rwanda
Here is a commanding new writer who comes to us with the honesty, the intensity, and the discerning curiosity of the young Naipaul
A sensitive writer. He feels deeply and expresses himself richly ... a powerful evocation of the foreign correspondent's experience
Anjan Sundaram's prose is so luscious . that the words come alive and practically dance on the page
In this thoughtful and evocative book, Anjan Sundaram takes us into the lives of those living under a dictatorship. He chronicles the sacrifices of the brave journalists who try to speak the truth about their own country, the damage those truths inflict on those who bear witness, and the horrors of silence for those who cannot speak. His clipped and lucid prose offers an illuminating look into a place too often ignored by the rest of the world
Anjan Sundaram is a keen observer and a fine writer. In Bad News, he has rendered a chilling chronicle of the creeping totalitarianism taking hold in Rwanda that is as disturbing as it is unforgettable
One of the finest works of reportage in living memory
Sundaram immediately captures the paranoia one feels in a country where citizens are both censored and self-censoring . Delicate and evocative prose . Subtle reminders of the country's violent past echo throughout the book . This book is a timely one
A chilling and valuable account of conditions inside Rwanda
Stark and at times desolate, Sundaram has written a harrowing account of life in "a mirage of a country" where the all-seeing presence of President Kagame has managed not only to destroy free institutions and free speech, but ultimately free thought as well
Superb, timely ... It is nothing less than the best book written about Rwanda by an outsider, a massively important contribution to understanding what is one of Africa's most important, inscrutable, regimes
Powerful and shocking
Few people have suffered the hideous fate of Rwandans in the modern era. It is shocking, painful beyond words, to see the darkness settling again in a dystopia that is crushing free expression and individual lives. This searing, evocative account provides insights about the human condition that reach far beyond the tragic story of Rwanda
Here is a commanding new writer who comes to us with the honesty, the intensity, and the discerning curiosity of the young Naipaul
A sensitive writer. He feels deeply and expresses himself richly ... a powerful evocation of the foreign correspondent's experience
Anjan Sundaram's prose is so luscious . that the words come alive and practically dance on the page
In this thoughtful and evocative book, Anjan Sundaram takes us into the lives of those living under a dictatorship. He chronicles the sacrifices of the brave journalists who try to speak the truth about their own country, the damage those truths inflict on those who bear witness, and the horrors of silence for those who cannot speak. His clipped and lucid prose offers an illuminating look into a place too often ignored by the rest of the world
Anjan Sundaram is a keen observer and a fine writer. In Bad News, he has rendered a chilling chronicle of the creeping totalitarianism taking hold in Rwanda that is as disturbing as it is unforgettable
One of the finest works of reportage in living memory
Sundaram immediately captures the paranoia one feels in a country where citizens are both censored and self-censoring . Delicate and evocative prose . Subtle reminders of the country's violent past echo throughout the book . This book is a timely one
A chilling and valuable account of conditions inside Rwanda
Stark and at times desolate, Sundaram has written a harrowing account of life in "a mirage of a country" where the all-seeing presence of President Kagame has managed not only to destroy free institutions and free speech, but ultimately free thought as well