'Vivid, urgent and unsettling' - Tom Holland'Judah paints another Europe with tense and dramatic detail' - Andrey Kurkov'Will make you lurch between fascination, laughter and tears' - Sophy RobertsWhat does it now mean to call yourself European? Who makes up this population of some 750 million, sprawled from Ireland to Ukraine, from Sweden to Turkey? Who has always called it home, and who has newly arrived from elsewhere? Who are the people who drive our long-distance lorries, steward our criss-crossing planes, lovingly craft our legacy wines, fish our depleted waters, and risk life itself in search of safety and a new start?In a series of vivid, ambitious, darkly visceral but always empathetic portraits of other people’s lives, journalist Ben Judah invites us to meet them. Drawn from hours of painstaking interviews, these vital stories reveal a frenetic and vibrant continent which has been transformed by diversity, migration, the internet, climate change, Covid, war and the quest for freedom.Laid dramatically bare, it may not always be a Europe we recognize – but this is Europe.Praise for Ben Judah’s This Is London:‘An epic work of reportage’ -The Guardian‘Eye-opening’ - The Sunday Times‘Opens readers’ eyes to the hardships experienced by many and ignored by most’ - Independent‘Shares Orwell’s appetite for documenting parts of society that are easily overlooked’ - Spectator‘Full of nuggets of unexpected information about the lives of others’ - Financial Times
CONTRIBUTORS: Ben JudahEAN: 9781447276265COUNTRY: United KingdomPAGES: WEIGHT: 0 gHEIGHT: 234 cm
PUBLISHED BY: Pan MacmillanDATE PUBLISHED: 2023-06-15CITY: GENRE: POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / European, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Discrimination, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Refugees, TRAVEL / Europe / GeneralWIDTH: 153 cmSPINE:
Book Themes:
Europe, Early 21st century c 2000 to c 2050, Reportage, journalism or collected columns, Social discrimination and social justice, Racism and racial discrimination / Anti-racism, Poverty and precarity, Migration, immigration and emigration, Travel writing
Imagine Ballard and Houellebecq teaming up on a Grand Tour, and you will have some idea of just how vivid, urgent and unsettling this superbly written book is., Deeply empathetic. Judah is an ace reporter with a novelist's love of character. He conjures people and place in a modern literary form he has made his own. There's no romance to this journey across Europe — but an abundance of story which will make you lurch between fascination, laughter and tears., Ben Judah has the ability to listen and retell, see and describe, feel and convey so that the reader believes they were there and experienced it all first hand. Through personal stories, told to him by an array of unlikely heroes, Judah paints another Europe with intense and dramatic detail – a Europe that you may not recognize, but that you will look for every day having read this book., A kaleidoscope of bright human experience. Moving, poignant and compelling – I devoured this in a day.
Ben Judah is an author and journalist. He has reported from across Europe with his writing on politics and society featuring widely, including in The Sunday Times, The Financial Times and Foreign Policy. His first book, Fragile Empire, was published by Yale Uni versity Press in 2013. His second book, This is London, published by Picador, was shortlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize 2016 and for the 2019 Ryszard Kapuscinski Award for Literary Reportage.
Format: Hardback
'Vivid, urgent and unsettling' - Tom Holland'Judah paints another Europe with tense and dramatic detail' - Andrey Kurkov'Will make you lurch between fascination, laughter and tears' - Sophy RobertsWhat does it now mean to call yourself European? Who makes up this population of some 750 million, sprawled from Ireland to Ukraine, from Sweden to Turkey? Who has always called it home, and who has newly arrived from elsewhere? Who are the people who drive our long-distance lorries, steward our criss-crossing planes, lovingly craft our legacy wines, fish our depleted waters, and risk life itself in search of safety and a new start?In a series of vivid, ambitious, darkly visceral but always empathetic portraits of other people’s lives, journalist Ben Judah invites us to meet them. Drawn from hours of painstaking interviews, these vital stories reveal a frenetic and vibrant continent which has been transformed by diversity, migration, the internet, climate change, Covid, war and the quest for freedom.Laid dramatically bare, it may not always be a Europe we recognize – but this is Europe.Praise for Ben Judah’s This Is London:‘An epic work of reportage’ -The Guardian‘Eye-opening’ - The Sunday Times‘Opens readers’ eyes to the hardships experienced by many and ignored by most’ - Independent‘Shares Orwell’s appetite for documenting parts of society that are easily overlooked’ - Spectator‘Full of nuggets of unexpected information about the lives of others’ - Financial Times
CONTRIBUTORS: Ben JudahEAN: 9781447276265COUNTRY: United KingdomPAGES: WEIGHT: 0 gHEIGHT: 234 cm
PUBLISHED BY: Pan MacmillanDATE PUBLISHED: 2023-06-15CITY: GENRE: POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / European, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Discrimination, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Refugees, TRAVEL / Europe / GeneralWIDTH: 153 cmSPINE:
Book Themes:
Europe, Early 21st century c 2000 to c 2050, Reportage, journalism or collected columns, Social discrimination and social justice, Racism and racial discrimination / Anti-racism, Poverty and precarity, Migration, immigration and emigration, Travel writing
Ben Judah is an author and journalist. He has reported from across Europe with his writing on politics and society featuring widely, including in The Sunday Times, The Financial Times and Foreign Policy. His first book, Fragile Empire, was published by Yale Uni versity Press in 2013. His second book, This is London, published by Picador, was shortlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize 2016 and for the 2019 Ryszard Kapuscinski Award for Literary Reportage.
Die man van elders, ’n titel wat onmiddellik my verbeelding geprikkel het. Gelukkig het die skrywer, die geliefde Helene de Kock, reeds so vroeg as op bladsy 27 vir die lesers ’n leidraad gegee oor haar gedagtegang wat betref Jean Botha: “Elders is iewers en tegelyk nêrens. En is dit nie waar hy nou is nie?” Dan neem die storielyn sy loop, en baie later kan Jean op sy eie stukkie grond staan en verklaar: “Ja, ek is die man van Elders. Soos Ou Paul sê, daar waar dit mooiweer en warm is.” (p.264)”
Die verhaal is veel meer as net een man se soeke na ’n plek waar hy behoort. Dit is ook die verhaal van Renette Brink wat met een oogopslag Jean se hart gesteel het, maar die prooi word van huishoudelike geweld en ’n narsis. “Haar man is verslaaf aan homself.” (p.211) Dit moes Renette op die harde manier agterkom. Nie ’n tema wat jou in die gehoor streel nie, maar sonder omhaal weergegee.
Daar is gelukkig ook baie heilsame aspekte in die storielyn ingebou soos ware vriendskap en aanvaarding sonder vooroordeel, tweede kanse, opoffering en dankbaarheid. Die geestelike pad wat die hoofkarakters loop, word ook subtiel bygewerk in die styl waarvoor hierdie skrywer bekend is.
Die man van elders is die derde in ’n reeks en volg op Diana se dag en Drome het ook asem. Moet glad nie bekommerd wees as jy die eerste twee nie gelees het nie, hierdie verhaal kan op eie bene staan. Dit sal egter ’n bonus wees as jy hulle sommer al drie in volgorde kan lees.
Human & Rousseau is die uitgewers. Dit is ’n druknaam van Jonathan Ball Uitgewers
"Big Dreams, Big Travel" is an consistently exciting adventure that immediately draws you into a mysterious dream world. Wim Balmer writes clearly, directly, and without unnecessary length – you practically fly through the pages. Jay's journey between dream and reality is intense, surprising, and makes you eager to keep reading.
A great fantasy book for young readers who want to dive straight into the adventure. Entertaining, dreamy, and absolutely recommended.
Extremely helpful - hundreds of topics covered.
2 Examples:
- Consider everything already broken.
Everything breaks, even rocks eventually become sand. So don't stress about it when somethings breaks! You knew it was going to happen!
- Beware of the mushroom effect of your thoughts. (She probably thinks this now. She's probably telling everybody. Now, this person will... etc)