
Summary
A monumental work of non-fiction exploring a wartime atrocity and its sixty-year denialWinner of the European Book Prize’A masterpiece’ Jan T. Gross’Terrifying and necessary’ Julian Barnes’Scrupulously objective and profoundly personal’ Kate AtkinsonOn 10 July 1941 a horrifying crime was committed in the small Polish town of Jedwadbne. Early in the afternoon, the town’s Jewish population - hundreds of men, women and children - were ordered out of their homes, and marched into the town square.…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780099592525 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 0099592525 |
| Author: | Anna Bikont |
| Publisher: | Cornerstone |
| Imprint: | Windmill Books |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 560 |
| Release Date: | 31 October 2016 |
| Weight: | 512g |
| Dimensions: | 198mm x 129mm x 40mm |
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Critics Review
An astonishing act of investigation and documentation. In the face of lies, denial and massive indifference, Bikont has established exactly what happened … The result is a terrifying and necessary book, unsparing in its detail, but deeply heartening as an act of historical reclamation. * Julian Barnes *Scrupulously objective and profoundly personal. * Kate Atkinson, Books of the Year, Wall Street Journal *A powerful and important study of the poisonous effects of racism and hatred within a community. * Guardian *A masterpiece of historical journalism … A must read for anyone interested in the Holocaust and its aftermath. * Jan T. Gross *A hauntingly plausible contemporary history, tactfully delivering truths that we might all do well to contemplate. * Timothy Snyder, author of Black Earth *Humane, measured and painstakingly researched … It is a hard-won testament to the importance of historical truth. * Daily Mail ‘Must Reads’ *Beautifully written, devastating and very important. – Louis Begley * The New York Times *One of the most important and most dramatic books of the last decade. – Ryszard KapuscinskiMagisterial… meticulous in its procedures, absolute in its commitment to truth. Bikont’s book is a book about forgetting, about the pollution of memory, about the conflict between the easy, convenient truth and the awkward, harder truth. It is a work that grows from its journalistic manner and origins into the most powerful writing of necessary history. * The New York Review of Books *The Crime and the Silence deserves to be read by everyone interested in the fraught politics of apology and the ongoing struggle of nations and communities to ascertain and accept difficult historical truths. – Lawrence Douglas * Irish Times *
About The Author
Anna Bikont
Anna Bikont is a journalist for Gazeta Wyborcza,one of Poland’s largest and most celebrated newspapers, which she helped found in 1989. For her articles on the crimes of Jedwabne and Radzil w, she was honored in 2001 with Poland’s most prestigious award in journalism, the Press Prize. In 2008 and 2009, Bikont was a Cullman Fellow of the New York Public Library.
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