Waiting to Be Arrested at Night by Tahir Hamut Izgil - ISBN: 9781529922752
Paperback
Uyghur poet’s desperate escape from a nightmarish surveillance state.

Waiting to Be Arrested at Night

A Uyghur Poet's Memoir of China's Genocide

$23.72

  • Paperback

    272 pages

  • Release Date

    12 November 2024

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Summary

A Uyghur poet’s piercing memoir of life under the most coercive surveillance regime in history

WINNER OF THE NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE’S JOHN LEONARD PRIZE FOR BEST FIRST BOOK

WINNER OF THE CHRISTOPHER G. MOORE PRIZE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS WRITING 2024

‘Essential reading’ AI WEIWEI, author of 1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows

‘Deserves to be read widely’ FINANCIAL TIMES

As his friends disappeared one by one, it becam…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781529922752
ISBN-10:1529922755
Author:Tahir Hamut Izgil, Joshua L. Freeman
Publisher:Vintage Publishing
Imprint:Vintage
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:272
Release Date:12 November 2024
Weight:196g
Dimensions:197mm x 129mm x 16mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

An urgent tale of survival and subversion * Economist, Books of the Year *Deserves to be read and listened to widely… This is a beautiful read. Izgil’s poetic gaze, and the elegant translation by Joshua L Freeman, together produce a compact, compelling prose that pushes you to keep reading on, even as you blink back tears * Financial Times *So much more than a thrilling account of a great escape. It is nothing less than a call to the West not to look away from one of the most terrible genocides of our times * Sunday Times *Izgil’s memoir is a story about how to survive in, and to negotiate one’s way through, a society in which repression has become routine, and the power of the state is unfettered. The book’s restraint is also its strength * Guardian *I… devoured it in one night. It is a stunning work with its lyrical prose and elegiac translation, a page-turner that stands alongside any thriller for the skill with which it builds tension as a noose tightens round an entire community… Tahir reveals again the banality of evil * i *In the elegant, elliptical poems that appear throughout the text – translated, like the rest of the memoir, with great skill and subtlety by Joshua L. Freeman – Tahir both acknowledges and transforms the worsening political situation. Perhaps one of the most remarkable aspects of the book is its refreshing lack of political rhetoric: there are no pronouncements on the great evil of the Chinese state. Tahir lets the awful facts speak for themselves * Times Literary Supplement *A heart-wrenching but beautifully written memoir * Daily Telegraph *More than just a memoir… It is also the story of the Uyghur people and the political, social, and cultural destruction of their homeland by the Chinese state * TIME *To call this merely ‘a good book’ is an understatement - it is essential reading – Ai Weiwei, author of 1000 Years of Joys and SorrowsAn outlier among books about human rights. This is in effect a psychological thriller, although the narrative unfolds like a classic horror movie as relative normalcy dissolves into a nightmare – Barbara Demick, author of Nothing to Envy

About The Author

Tahir Hamut Izgil

Tahir Hamut Izgil (Author)

Tahir Hamut Izgil is one of the foremost poets writing in the Uyghur language. He grew up in Kashgar, an ancient city in the southwest of the Uyghur homeland. After attending college in Beijing, he returned to the Uyghur region and emerged as a prominent film director. His poetry has appeared, in Joshua L. Freeman’s English translation, in the New York Review of Books, Asymptote, Gulf Coast and elsewhere, and has also been extensively translated into Chinese, Japanese, French and Turkish. He lives near Washington, D.C.

Joshua L. Freeman (Introducer, Translator)

Joshua L. Freeman is a historian of twentieth-century China and a translator of Uyghur poetry. His writing and translations have appeared in the New York Times, Guardian, Times Literary Supplement and elsewhere. He is an assistant research fellow at the Institute of Modern History, Academia Sinica, in Taiwan.

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