Places and Names
Autor Elliot Ackermanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 iun 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780525559986
ISBN-10: 0525559981
Pagini: 258
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.23 kg
Editura: Penguin Publishing Group
ISBN-10: 0525559981
Pagini: 258
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.23 kg
Editura: Penguin Publishing Group
Notă biografică
Elliot
Ackermanis
the
author
of
several
novels
includingDark
at
the
Crossing,
which
was
a
finalist
for
the
National
Book
Award,
and
most
recentlyWaiting
for
Eden.
His
writings
appear
in
Esquire,
The
New
Yorker,
The
Atlantic,
and
The
New
York
Times
Magazine,
among
other
publications,
and
his
stories
have
been
included
in
The
Best
American
Short
Stories
and
The
Best
American
Travel
Writing.
He
is
both
a
former
White
House
Fellow
and
Marine,
and
served
five
tours
of
duty
in
Iraq
and
Afghanistan,
where
he
received
the
Silver
Star,
the
Bronze
Star
for
Valor,
and
the
Purple
Heart.
He
divides
his
time
between
New
York
City
and
Washington,
D.C.
Recenzii
Elliot
Ackerman's
exceptional
memoir
is
really
a
double
memoir
of
his
own
experiences
as
a
Marine
and
those
of
a
Jihadist
fighter
he
befriends
in
a
refugee
camp.
The
result
is
asuperb,
unique
and
unforgettable
story
of
war
and
death,
fear
and
cruelty,
above
all
the
horrors
and
allure
of
combat.
Elliot Ackerman's voice scares me. It's a bit too close for comfort. He sees too much and he knows too much, and that makes him a greatguide to today's post-everything Middle East. Read him at your own risk - butignore this book at your own peril.
Rare is the writer who can illuminate either the experience of the individual or the larger context of the times in which we live. Elliot Ackerman manages to do both. He is asadept at describing the strange cocktail of emotions that accompany the moments preceding combat as he is unraveling the Gordian Knot of contemporary geopolitics. That he does so in thegraceful, lucid prosefans of his fiction have come to admire is even more remarkable.Places and Namesis anextraordinarily beautiful and insightfulwork of memoir and journalism by a writer who deserves to be read widely.
How often does one encounter a novel asperfectly shaped, as fresh, as subtle and as explosiveas this? I couldn't turn away from Elliot Ackerman's latest taut wonder, and when I got to the final page,I wantedto start all over again, in the light of the haunting last words. Patiently, and unflinchingly, Ackerman is becomingone of the great poet laureates of America'stragic adventurism across the globe.
When I finished Elliot Ackerman'sPlaces and Namesmy copy was covered with bracketed paragraphs and underlined phrases. There is no surer indicator of a book filled with insight and good writing. Ackerman's honest searching to come to terms with his war experience helped me better understand my own.This book is a gift that should be shared with every American who helped pay for people like Ackerman to fight their warsfor them.
Places and Namesis its own profile in courage: the story of how a Marine turned reporter struggled with the polemics of desolation in the Middle East. Elliot Ackerman is a man of both action and thought, and his book is closely observed, rigorously lived, and clarifying for all of us who have not understood how U.S. policy in the Islamic world went so terribly wrong.
InPlaces and Names, Elliot Ackerman, a soldier turned writer, seeks out his former foes and confronts his own memories on battlefields where the killing continues. The result isone of the most profound books I have ever read about the real nature of war and the abstract allure of the ideas and the bloodshed that fuels it.
Places and Namesis a brilliant and gripping account of the aftermath of failed wars and revolutions, and of the still burning idealism that smolders in the wreckage. Elliot Ackerman brings a novelist's skill with language, a reporter's eye for detail, and his life experience as a highly decorated Marine veteran of five deployments to bear in thisunique and powerful meditation on violence, heroism, and the fracturing of the Middle East."
What a great, honest book-the kind that makes one feel lucky to have in one's hands. Ackerman has served his country twice: first as an infantryman in our nations wars, and then as a guide-wise beyond his years-who helps us understand what we've done. His prose is easy and comfortable like an old jacket.His understanding of war is so profound that one feels like secrets have been revealed-truths-information that one day may be necessary for our survival. Well done.
Elliot Ackerman fought the Long War, and now, withPlaces and Names, he gives us a searingly honest record of his ongoing effort to make sense of the war. This is, literally, a book of wanderings; Ackerman's sojourns to conflict zones, old battlefields, and muddy refugee camps recall the wanderings of that earlier soldier, Odysseus, as he struggles to come home from war, and, no less than his predecessor, Ackerman finds himself journeying through the shadow world of ghosts and spirits that go by the name of memory.Vivid, profound, restless, and relentlessly probing,Places and Namesis destined to become a classic of the Long War.
Ackerman brings a fiction writer's touch to his reportage. The soldier-scribe is a familiar figure in British narratives of the region, from TE Lawrence to Rory Stewart. Ackerman fits easily into this tradition ... The book shows what it is like to be in the middle of it all - particularly for a young, open-minded and quietly idealistic American.
It is a rare writer who is not afraid to deal with the toughest conflicts, ask the hardest questions, show the darkest side of even heroes, and still manage to renew our faith in humanity.
Elliot Ackerman was a young Marine Corps officer during the battle of Fallujah in 2004. I was an embedded journalist with his unit, which lost 20 men in the first week of fighting. I remember him as clever, direct and sometimes playfully ironic, all qualities on display in his book about what he has seen of war,Places and Names. His account of how he won a Silver Star is gripping, the chaotic reality on the ground contrasting with the po-faced and supremely uninformative official citation. His descriptions of Syria, which he visited as a writer, were so painfully evocative for me that I had to stop reading for a time. His vivid, sparse prose bears comparison to that of Tim O'Brien inThe Things They Carriedor Norman Lewis inNaples '44;Places and Nameshas the same clear-eyed view of what war is.
Beautiful writing about combat and humanity and what it means to 'win' a war.
Green on Blue is harrowing, brutal, and utterly absorbing. With spare prose, Ackerman has spun a morally complex tale of revenge, loyalty, and brotherly love ... a disturbing glimpse into one of the world's most troubled regions.
This novel as a whole attests to Mr. Ackerman's breadth of understanding - an understanding not just of the seasonal rhythms of war in Afghanistan and the harsh, unforgiving beauty of that land, not just of the hardships of being a soldier there, but a bone-deep understanding of the toll that a seemingly endless war has taken on ordinary Afghans who have known no other reality for decades.
Elliot Ackerman has done something brave as a writer and even braver as a soldier: He has touched, for real, the culture and soul of his enemy
Elliot Ackerman's voice scares me. It's a bit too close for comfort. He sees too much and he knows too much, and that makes him a greatguide to today's post-everything Middle East. Read him at your own risk - butignore this book at your own peril.
Rare is the writer who can illuminate either the experience of the individual or the larger context of the times in which we live. Elliot Ackerman manages to do both. He is asadept at describing the strange cocktail of emotions that accompany the moments preceding combat as he is unraveling the Gordian Knot of contemporary geopolitics. That he does so in thegraceful, lucid prosefans of his fiction have come to admire is even more remarkable.Places and Namesis anextraordinarily beautiful and insightfulwork of memoir and journalism by a writer who deserves to be read widely.
How often does one encounter a novel asperfectly shaped, as fresh, as subtle and as explosiveas this? I couldn't turn away from Elliot Ackerman's latest taut wonder, and when I got to the final page,I wantedto start all over again, in the light of the haunting last words. Patiently, and unflinchingly, Ackerman is becomingone of the great poet laureates of America'stragic adventurism across the globe.
When I finished Elliot Ackerman'sPlaces and Namesmy copy was covered with bracketed paragraphs and underlined phrases. There is no surer indicator of a book filled with insight and good writing. Ackerman's honest searching to come to terms with his war experience helped me better understand my own.This book is a gift that should be shared with every American who helped pay for people like Ackerman to fight their warsfor them.
Places and Namesis its own profile in courage: the story of how a Marine turned reporter struggled with the polemics of desolation in the Middle East. Elliot Ackerman is a man of both action and thought, and his book is closely observed, rigorously lived, and clarifying for all of us who have not understood how U.S. policy in the Islamic world went so terribly wrong.
InPlaces and Names, Elliot Ackerman, a soldier turned writer, seeks out his former foes and confronts his own memories on battlefields where the killing continues. The result isone of the most profound books I have ever read about the real nature of war and the abstract allure of the ideas and the bloodshed that fuels it.
Places and Namesis a brilliant and gripping account of the aftermath of failed wars and revolutions, and of the still burning idealism that smolders in the wreckage. Elliot Ackerman brings a novelist's skill with language, a reporter's eye for detail, and his life experience as a highly decorated Marine veteran of five deployments to bear in thisunique and powerful meditation on violence, heroism, and the fracturing of the Middle East."
What a great, honest book-the kind that makes one feel lucky to have in one's hands. Ackerman has served his country twice: first as an infantryman in our nations wars, and then as a guide-wise beyond his years-who helps us understand what we've done. His prose is easy and comfortable like an old jacket.His understanding of war is so profound that one feels like secrets have been revealed-truths-information that one day may be necessary for our survival. Well done.
Elliot Ackerman fought the Long War, and now, withPlaces and Names, he gives us a searingly honest record of his ongoing effort to make sense of the war. This is, literally, a book of wanderings; Ackerman's sojourns to conflict zones, old battlefields, and muddy refugee camps recall the wanderings of that earlier soldier, Odysseus, as he struggles to come home from war, and, no less than his predecessor, Ackerman finds himself journeying through the shadow world of ghosts and spirits that go by the name of memory.Vivid, profound, restless, and relentlessly probing,Places and Namesis destined to become a classic of the Long War.
Ackerman brings a fiction writer's touch to his reportage. The soldier-scribe is a familiar figure in British narratives of the region, from TE Lawrence to Rory Stewart. Ackerman fits easily into this tradition ... The book shows what it is like to be in the middle of it all - particularly for a young, open-minded and quietly idealistic American.
It is a rare writer who is not afraid to deal with the toughest conflicts, ask the hardest questions, show the darkest side of even heroes, and still manage to renew our faith in humanity.
Elliot Ackerman was a young Marine Corps officer during the battle of Fallujah in 2004. I was an embedded journalist with his unit, which lost 20 men in the first week of fighting. I remember him as clever, direct and sometimes playfully ironic, all qualities on display in his book about what he has seen of war,Places and Names. His account of how he won a Silver Star is gripping, the chaotic reality on the ground contrasting with the po-faced and supremely uninformative official citation. His descriptions of Syria, which he visited as a writer, were so painfully evocative for me that I had to stop reading for a time. His vivid, sparse prose bears comparison to that of Tim O'Brien inThe Things They Carriedor Norman Lewis inNaples '44;Places and Nameshas the same clear-eyed view of what war is.
Beautiful writing about combat and humanity and what it means to 'win' a war.
Green on Blue is harrowing, brutal, and utterly absorbing. With spare prose, Ackerman has spun a morally complex tale of revenge, loyalty, and brotherly love ... a disturbing glimpse into one of the world's most troubled regions.
This novel as a whole attests to Mr. Ackerman's breadth of understanding - an understanding not just of the seasonal rhythms of war in Afghanistan and the harsh, unforgiving beauty of that land, not just of the hardships of being a soldier there, but a bone-deep understanding of the toll that a seemingly endless war has taken on ordinary Afghans who have known no other reality for decades.
Elliot Ackerman has done something brave as a writer and even braver as a soldier: He has touched, for real, the culture and soul of his enemy