by Arkady Babchenko (Author)
This is an outstanding dispatch from the frontline of war - unsparing, unsentimental, blackly comic and brutally beautiful - from an ordinary soldier who tells it like it is.This title features readers of contemporary reportage and war writing - from Herr and Kapuscinski to Swofford's Jarhead and Bowden's Black Hawk Down ; plus lovers of Tolstoy, Chekhov, Babel, et al, Russophiles. I always thought that war was black and white. But it is colour. A compulsively readable, autobiographical account of life as a young soldier in Russia's Chechen wars, it takes the raw and mundane reality of days amid guns and grenades and twists it into compelling, chilling - and eerily elegant - prose. With unblinking honesty, Babchenko traces his journey from innocence to experience, beginning with his teenage arrival in the transit camp just north of Chechnya and harsh treatment by his seniors as a naive and scared new recruit, through to his period of active duty at the front, by which time, he has become a brutalized and hardened soldier.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 336
Publisher: Portobello Books Ltd
Published: 08 Nov 2007
ISBN 10: 1846270391
ISBN 13: 9781846270390