by NeilBelton (Author)
Since she went to Belsen in 1945, to work with survivors of the camp at the age of nineteen, Helen Bamber's life has been devoted to working with people who have suffered the most appalling physical and psychological damage at the hands of others. From survivors of the holocaust (including her own husband) and of the Burma railroad, through the victims of South African, Argentinian, Iraqi, Iranian and Israeli regimes, she has fought for and worked to heal those who have suffered at the hands of political and military torturers. Neil Belton will use her story as the basis to examine the extraordinary resurrection of torture as an instrument of political power in our century, the experiences of sufferers, in a book that will be both a powerful and harrowing examination of the darkest sides of humanity, and of the character of one extraordinary, good and complex human being. This will be a remarkable and important book.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 374
Edition: 1st
Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Published: 14 Dec 1998
ISBN 10: 0297819046
ISBN 13: 9780297819042
Book Overview: * Neil Belton worked with both Brian Keenan and Eric Lomax as editor when he was at Cape. This book will share those books' combination of the story of an exemplary individual with an examination of the nature of human behaviour at the extremes * Helen Bamber is very much alive and well and still active in the organisation she founded. She has worked with both Brian Keenan and Eric Lomax (and many of his fellow survivors of the Burma railroad) * a powerful, subtle, moving and tactful piece of writing, it is bound to become a 'famous' book
Prizes: Winner of Irish Times Literary Prize 1999.