The Buried
Peter Hessler
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Beschreibung
'Tenacious, revelatory, and humane.' - Paul Theroux
'The Buried is the kind of book that you don't want to end and won't forget. With the eye of a great storyteller Peter Hessler weaves together history, reporting, memoir, and above all the lives of ordinary people in a beautiful and haunting portrait of Egypt and its Revolution.' - Ben Rhodes
Winner of the The Peter Mackenzie Smith Book Prize 2021
In 2011, while revolution swept across Egypt, Peter Hessler was reporting on the everyday lives and ancient secrets of a country in turmoil.
The result is this unforgettable work of literary and documentary brilliance. In The Buried, Hessler traces the human stories alongside the broader sweep of historic events: Tahrir Square, the massacres and the coup form the background, but so too do ancient cults, buried cities in the desert and dead pharaohs with huge ambitions. Most important are the people forging their lives in this world. We follow rubbish collector Sayyid; Arabic teacher Rifaat; and Manu, a translator. There are also the Chinese immigrants who have built a lingerie empire, politicians and ingenious archaeologists. Together, they raise the question: is revolution just repetition, or can things ever really change?
Rezensionen
Hessler '
<p>Praise for <i>River Town</i><br>'
At once engrossing and illuminating ... this stakes a strong claim to being the definitive book to emerge from the Egyptian revolution.
Nuanced and deeply intelligent-a view of Egyptian politics that sometimes seems to look at everything but and that opens onto an endlessly complex place and people.
Hessler introduces unexpected prisms of enquiry and the intimate perspective of an endlessly curious observer ... The book achieves a great deal. It provides outstanding reportage of the Arab Spring but, better yet, are Hessler'
The Buried is wonderfully impressive, not a conventional travel book at all, but the chronicle of a family'
<i>The Buried</i> is the kind of book that you don't want to end and won'
[An] extraordinary survey of contemporary China...really quite unforgettable
In <i>The Buried</i>, Peter Hessler brings to life the secret history of the Arab Spring, masterfully weaving together a memoir of his time in Cairo with the hidden, intimate lives of ordinary Egyptians. With lyrical prose, Hessler introduces us to a side of the Middle East we never see in news accounts: an enterprising garbage collector, a gay man skirting police repression, an Arabic language instructor nostalgic for the country's socialist past. These stories unfold on the backdrop of Egypt's 5,000-year-old history, as we learn about the parallels Egyptians draw to their pharaonic past. Witty and deeply humane, The Unburied is unlike any other book I've read about the Egyptian revolution, and stands as a remarkable testament to the country'
Original, richly layered, and often delightful reporting. Hessler has a sharp sense of humor, a gift for observation, a healthy skepticism, and a knack for using memorable characters and anecdotes to demonstrate larger truths . . . This is what reporting can be at its best: clear-eyed and empathetic, an addition to the historical record.
Drawing both from daily life and from interviews with highly placed political figures, the book is an extraordinary work of reportage ... Sensitive and perceptive
Destined to become the title that all first-time visitors to Egypt are urged to pack. . . . Hessler is an extraordinary writer.
This is writing at its best and highly recommended for anyone interested in Egypt, modern or ancient.
Peter Hessler is one of the finest storytellers of his generation.
<i>The Buried</i> ... is Mr. Hessler'
If you read only one book about China, let it be this
Peter Hessler is one of the finest storytellers of his generation. The beauty of his writing is subtle and cumulative-it gets under your skin. After his years in China, Hessler moved with his family to Cairo during the electric, chaotic days of protests in Tahrir Square. Through him, you come to know many Egyptians as he came to know them-casually, intimately, forming deepening ties. And through them you experience Egypt'
It is both beautiful and heartbreaking ... Hessler has a genius for structuring a narrative. ... Every page is vivid and engaging, and each chapter packs in surprises.
<p>It is both beautiful and heartbreaking ... Hessler has a genius for structuring a narrative. Here he has crafted a<br>miraculously coherent arc out of several disparate themes ... Every page is vivid and engaging, and each chapter packs in surprises.</p>
<p>Praise for <i>The Oracle Bones</i><br>'
A swirl of interconnecting stories and histories make up Peter Hessler'
Kundenbewertungen
Katherine Boo, prize winning books 2022, egyptology, An Archaeology of the Egyptian Revolution, Oracle Bones, silk roads, the arab spring, travel books egypt, Silk Roads, Country Driving, River Town, William Dalrymple, underground