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Elliot Ackerman

Dark at the Crossing


A Novel. Nominiert: National Book Award 2017
2017. 256 S. 8.0000 in
Verlag/Jahr: RANDOM HOUSE US; VINTAGE 2017
ISBN: 1-10-197155-X (110197155X)
Neue ISBN: 978-1-10-197155-0 (9781101971550)

Preis und Lieferzeit: Bitte klicken


NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FINALIST

ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR: The Washington Post - NPR - The Christian Science Monitor - Military Times - Vogue - Bloomberg

Haris Abadi, a wayward Arab American with a conflicted past, has finally found his purpose: he will cross into Syria and join the fight against Bashar al-Assad´s oppressive regime. But before he can get there, he is robbed and abandoned on the Turkish side of the border. Fortunately for Haris, he is picked up by Amir, a charismatic revolutionary turned refugee. Amir´s wife, Daphne, is a beautiful, grief-stricken woman who shares Haris´s longing to make it into Syria-but for altogether different reasons. As he grows closer to the couple who rescued him, Haris must confront his own motivations and ask himself what kind of man-radical or idealist, hero or coward-he truly is.
A NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FINALIST

ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR:

The Washington Post - NPR - The Christian Science Monitor - Military Times

"One could argue that the most vital literary terrain in America´s overseas wars is now occupied not by journalists but by novelists...Elliot Ackerman is certainly one of those novelists...He has created people who are not the equivalents of the locally exotic subjects in your average NPR story, and he has used them to populate a fascinating and topical novel."
-Lawrence Osborne, New York Times Book Review

"Ackerman, who lives in Istanbul and has written some fine reportage from the Turkish borderlands, knows Gaziantep well and sharply depicts its incongruities . . . He shows boldness and empathy in trying to envision modern conflagrations from foreign vantage points."
-Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal

"Ackerman´s eye for detail grounds this novel in a space that quickly transports readers into a world few Americans know . . . Dark at the Crossing is not only a fictional meditation on remorse, betrayal, love and loss, but also a journey that returns us to the beautiful and broken world we live in."
-Washington Post

"Dark at the Crossing promises to be one of the most essential books of 2017."
-Esquire

"Visceral, unsentimental and in a style that begs to be underlined and savored, this is a novel about how people carry the emotional and physical scars of war through their lives, and how war both demolishes and becomes home . . . The many references to actual street and district names, smells and unique predicaments, such as underfunded, understaffed hospitals that are teeming with refugees, heighten the book´s authenticity and earnestness."
-Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

"Dark at the Crossing is every bit as taut and harrowing as the place it depicts, a region where fifteen years of relentless war play out in filthy refugee camps and upscale shopping malls. Elliot Ackerman has written a brilliant, admirably merciless novel of broken lives, broken places, and good intentions gone awry."
-Ben Fountain, author of Billy Lynn´s Long Halftime Walk

"Infused with profound knowledge, empathy, and chutzpah, Ackerman´s writing is hauntingly evocative and beautiful. It is a rare writer who is not afraid to deal with the toughest conflicts, ask the hardest questions, show the darkest side of even heroes, and still manage to renew our faith in humanity."
-Elif Shafak, author of The Bastard of Istanbul

"Here is a thriller, psychological fiction, political intrigue, and even a love story all wrapped into a stunningly realistic and sometimes horrifying package. Put Ackerman on the A-list."
-Library Journal (starred)

"Elliot Ackerman´s quietly subversive sensibilities make him one of the most potent and original writers to emerge from that elite platoon of men and women who, since 9/11, have laid down their guns to pick up a pen. Once again, here in his second novel, Dark at the Crossing, Ackerman insists American readers immerse themselves in the humanity of their country´s enemies and victims. His work is a unique and bittersweet blessing of raw grace and naked, bleeding empathy."
-Bob Shacochis, author of The Woman Who Lost Her Soul

"Once again, Elliot Ackerman dares to imagine his way into the minds, lives, and fates of people too many American writers would judge as inaccessible-perhaps even forbidden. The result is a book whose emotional acuity is matched only by its literary artistry. They don´t award medals of valor to novelists, but while reading this book I often thought, Maybe they should."
-Tom Bissell, author of Apostle: Travels Among the Tombs of the Twelve

"Ackerman has done a masterful job of creating a novel of ideas that invites thoughtful consideration of the folly and futility of war and the failure of idealism . . . The text is beautifully written, and the rendering of the setting is superb.