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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Francois Bizot , Charlotte Mandell , Antoine AndouardPublisher: Random House USA Inc Imprint: Vintage Books Dimensions: Width: 13.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 20.30cm Weight: 0.181kg ISBN: 9780307475145ISBN 10: 030747514 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 02 July 2013 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsPraise for Francois Bizot's Facing the Torturer A powerful philosophical meditation on the nature of humanity--and inhumanity--and personal responsibility, and an empathetic attempt to bring Duch the man out from behind Duch the monster. -- Financial Times Bizot bravely addresses the nature of genocide and the darkest heart of human nature. -- Library Journal Contemplative. . . . A searching and peculiar meditation on human nature. -- San Francisco Chronicle Mesmerizing. . . . Bizot presents a complex portrait of Duch that richly rewards close reading. -- Richmond Times-Dispatch As much an account of the events in court as a passionate and eloquent memoir. . . . Francois Bizot taps into his experience and feelings and explores how evil lurks in each of us. -- Le Monde Francois Bizot has written a book that will go down in history. He breaks one of the most hypocritical taboos: yes, the mass-murderer is a man, worse still, a man like any other. An exceptionally powerful book. A crucial account, to be read urgently by everyone. -- L'Express An honest exploration of what it means to share moments of humanity with a man most people would consider inhuman. -- Kirkus Reviews Profound and moving. -- Publishers Weekly A meditation on original sin and the banality of evil. . . . Those who have read The Gate will undoubtedly want to read this. . . . A hard and admirable book. -- The Spectator A soliloquy on the nature of evil. What, asks Francois Bizot again and again in different forms, makes a man who is in other ways ordinary and even humane into a torturer and mass executioner? -- Literary Review Brilliantly written. . . Facing the Torturer is a deeply moving book. -- Asia Times Ten years after the worldwide success of The Gate --the account of his incarceration under the Khmers Rouge--Francois Bizot <b>Praise for Francois Bizot's <i>Facing the Torturer</b> A powerful philosophical meditation on the nature of humanity--and inhumanity--and personal responsibility, and an empathetic attempt to bring Duch the man out from behind Duch the monster. --<i>Financial Times</i> Bizot bravely addresses the nature of genocide and the darkest heart of human nature. --<i>Library Journal</i> Contemplative. . . . A searching and peculiar meditation on human nature. --<i>San Francisco Chronicle</i> Mesmerizing. . . . Bizot presents a complex portrait of Duch that richly rewards close reading. --<i>Richmond Times-Dispatch</i> As much an account of the events in court as a passionate and eloquent memoir. . . . Francois Bizot taps into his experience and feelings and explores how evil lurks in each of us. --<i>Le Monde</i> Francois Bizot has written a book that will go down in history. He breaks one of the most hypocritical taboos: yes, the mass-murderer is a man, worse still, a man like any other. An exceptionally powerful book. A crucial account, to be read urgently by everyone. --<i>L'Express</i> An honest exploration of what it means to share moments of humanity with a man most people would consider inhuman. --<i>Kirkus Reviews</i> Profound and moving. --<i>Publishers Weekly</i> A meditation on original sin and the banality of evil. . . . Those who have read <i>The Gate</i> will undoubtedly want to read this. . . . A hard and admirable book. --<i>The Spectator</i> A soliloquy on the nature of evil. What, asks Francois Bizot again and again in different forms, makes a man who is in other ways ordinary and even humane into a torturer and mass executioner? --<i>Literary Review</i> Brilliantly written. . . <i>Facing the Torturer </i>is a deeply moving book. --<i>Asia Times</i> Ten years after the worldwide success of <i>The Gate</i>--the account of his incarceration under the Khmers Rouge--Francois Bizot revisits this devastating experience in an exceptional book. This is more than just an important historical account--it provides an incredibly precise and gripping dissection of the prisoner's frame of mind. A profoundly literary endeavor to pull back the veils that we use to remain at a distance from mass murderers. --<i>Marianne</i> This book takes us to the edge of an abyss, alarmingly far into the depths of the human soul. --<i>Liberation</i> Without self-righteousness or affectation, Bizot unravels the thread of lost innocence and impossible brotherhoods. Thus his torturer continues to torment him, down to the vile gratitude to which he remains obliged. The book is an odiously magnificent confession. --<i>Le Nouvel Observateur</i> A terrifying but essential read. <i>Facing the Torturer</i> explores the essential question of the connection between a concept and its subjective experience. It's a touching, moving, even upsetting book. . . . It's luminous and grand. --<i>La Quinzaine litteraire</i> The ethnologist offers a troubling testimony to the memory of his lost companions, and forces himself to question the bond--if ever there was one--which he shared with his torturer Duch. --<i>Le Journal du Dimanche</i> A fascinating, beautiful work haunted by the enigma of Evil. An important book in which Bizot explores the ambiguity of the human soul. --<i>La Vie</i></p> <p>Praise for Francois Bizot's Facing the Torturer<br> <br> A powerful philosophical meditation on the nature of humanity--and inhumanity--and personal responsibility, and an empathetic attempt to bring Duch the man out from behind Duch the monster. <br>-- Financial Times <br> Bizot bravely addresses the nature of genocide and the darkest heart of human nature. <br>-- Library Journal <br> Contemplative. . . . A searching and peculiar meditation on human nature. <br>-- San Francisco Chronicle <br> Mesmerizing. . . . Bizot presents a complex portrait of Duch that richly rewards close reading. <br>-- Richmond Times-Dispatch <br> As much an account of the events in court as a passionate and eloquent memoir. . . . Francois Bizot taps into his experience and feelings and explores how evil lurks in each of us. <br>-- Le Monde <br> Francois Bizot has written a book that will go down in history. He breaks one of the most hypocritical taboos: yes, the mass-murderer is a man, worse still, a man like any other. An exceptionally powerful book. A crucial account, to be read urgently by everyone. <br>-- L'Express <br> An honest exploration of what it means to share moments of humanity with a man most people would consider inhuman. <br>-- Kirkus Reviews <br> Profound and moving. <br>-- Publishers Weekly <br> A meditation on original sin and the banality of evil. . . . Those who have read The Gate will undoubtedly want to read this. . . . A hard and admirable book. <br>-- The Spectator <br> A soliloquy on the nature of evil. What, asks Francois Bizot again and again in different forms, makes a man who is in other ways ordinary and even humane into a torturer and mass executioner? <br>-- Literary Review <br> Brilliantly written. . . Facing the Torturer is a deeply moving book. <br>-- Asia Times <br> Ten years after the worldwide success of The Gate --the account of his incarceration under the Khmers Rouge--Francois Bizot Praise for Francois Bizot's Facing the Torturer A powerful philosophical meditation on the nature of humanity--and inhumanity--and personal responsibility, and an empathetic attempt to bring Duch the man out from behind Duch the monster. -- Financial Times Bizot bravely addresses the nature of genocide and the darkest heart of human nature. -- Library Journal Contemplative. . . . A searching and peculiar meditation on human nature. -- San Francisco Chronicle Mesmerizing. . . . Bizot presents a complex portrait of Duch that richly rewards close reading. -- Richmond Times-Dispatch As much an account of the events in court as a passionate and eloquent memoir. . . . FranCois Bizot taps into his experience and feelings and explores how evil lurks in each of us. -- Le Monde FranCois Bizot has written a book that will go down in history. He breaks one of the most hypocritical taboos: yes, the mass-murderer is a man, worse still, a man like any other. An exceptionally powerful book. A crucial account, to be read urgently by everyone. -- L'Express An honest exploration of what it means to share moments of humanity with a man most people would consider inhuman. -- Kirkus Reviews Profound and moving. -- Publishers Weekly A meditation on original sin and the banality of evil. . . . Those who have read The Gate will undoubtedly want to read this. . . . A hard and admirable book. -- The Spectator A soliloquy on the nature of evil. What, asks Francois Bizot again and again in different forms, makes a man who is in other ways ordinary and even humane into a torturer and mass executioner? -- Literary Review Brilliantly written. . . Facing the Torturer is a deeply moving book. -- Asia Times Ten years after the worldwide success of The Gate --the account of his incarceration under the Khmers Rouge--FranCois Bizot revisits this devastating experience in an exceptional book. This is more than just an important historical account--it provides an incredibly precise and gripping dissection of the prisoner's frame of mind. A profoundly literary endeavor to pull back the veils that we use to remain at a distance from mass murderers. -- Marianne This book takes us to the edge of an abyss, alarmingly far into the depths of the human soul. -- LibEration Without self-righteousness or affectation, Bizot unravels the thread of lost innocence and impossible brotherhoods. Thus his torturer continues to torment him, down to the vile gratitude to which he remains obliged. The book is an odiously magnificent confession. -- Le Nouvel Observateur A terrifying but essential read. Facing the Torturer explores the essential question of the connection between a concept and its subjective experience. It's a touching, moving, even upsetting book. . . . It's luminous and grand. -- La Quinzaine littEraire The ethnologist offers a troubling testimony to the memory of his lost companions, and forces himself to question the bond--if ever there was one--which he shared with his torturer Duch. -- Le Journal du Dimanche A fascinating, beautiful work haunted by the enigma of Evil. An important book in which Bizot explores the ambiguity of the human soul. -- La Vie Author InformationFrançois Bizot is the author of The Gate. He is an ethnologist who has spent the greater part of his career studying Buddhism. He is the Director of Studies at Ecole Pratique des Hautes études and holds the chair in Southeast Asian Buddhism at the Sorbonne. He lives in Paris. (Facing the Torturer was translated from the French by Charlotte Mandell and Antoine Audouard.) Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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