Jan. 15th, 2007

2007 books

Jan. 15th, 2007 10:50 am
peteryoung: (Default)


6) Pieter Frans Thomése, Shadow Child, 2003
A sensitive autobiographical account of the loss of an infant daughter to illness. It's often unsettling reading, detached and quite deliberately existentialist, and while there is little sentimentality there is in its place an abundance of very literate prose. But Thomése seems to be consciously avoiding any direct expression of grief, instead looking for the meaning of his daughter's lost life in words, oblique language and even literary precedents. Having once lost a child myself (by miscarriage) I can infer precisely where he is coming from, though his expression of those similar feelings is inevitably more complex and visceral, though still highly articulate.

2007 books

Jan. 15th, 2007 10:52 am
peteryoung: (Cambodia)


7) Dith Pran, Kim DePaul, eds., Children of Cambodia's Killing Fields, 1997
Dith Pran is the Cambodian photojournalist on whose experiences the film The Killing Fields was based, and these brief memoirs of other survivors is made up mostly of Cambodian immigrants to the US, now in their 30s and 40s. They look at how the four-year reign of the Khmer Rouge deliberately focussed on the physical and emotional division of families, with very few surviving intact. The extreme levels of cruelty leave me wondering where and how the dehumanising process actually begins, beyond the Maoist illogic of Pol Pot, having to rely as it did on Pot's henchmen and the manipulation of the many thousands of soldiers who enforced his ideology of fear, with the ultimate aim of cultivating total paranoia in an entire population in the name of an unreachable communist utopia. If there is such a thing as a book of memoirs by various Khmer Rouge militia it will make very interesting reading, but in the meantime, now that the trials of the surviving Khmer Rouge leadership are under way, I expect this useful but ultimately tragic book is currently finding plenty more readers.
peteryoung: (Gandhi)
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