North Korea, run by a mad dictator, is cut off from the rest of the world, unknown and unknowable. But North Korea is also a place where ordinary people live, dream and learn to survive. Demick draws a powerful portrait of a bizzare society and the very real lives it affects.
Barbara Demick Libri
Barbara Demick è una giornalista americana il cui lavoro si concentra su profonde storie umane provenienti da società chiuse. Il suo stile di reportage penetra questioni sociali e politiche complesse, avvicinando ai lettori le vite di persone comuni in condizioni estreme. Il suo approccio combina precisione giornalistica ed empatia, permettendole di scoprire le sfumature dell'esperienza umana dove le informazioni sono scarse. Si dedica principalmente a documentare l'impatto dei regimi repressivi e dei conflitti bellici su individui e comunità.





Twenty years after the siege of Sarajevo, BBC Samuel Johnson Prize winner Barbara Demick revisits her compelling account of living in a city under fire.
In 1950, China claimed sovereignty over Tibet, leading to decades of unrest and resistance, defining the country today. In Eat the Buddha, Barbara Demick chronicles the Tibetan tragedy from Ngaba, a defiant town on the eastern edge of the Tibetan plateau where dozens of Tibetans have shocked the world since 2009 by immolating themselves. Following the stories of the last princess of the region, of Tibetans who experienced the struggle sessions of Mao's Cultural Revolution, of the recent generations of monks and townsfolk experiencing renewed repression, Demick paints a riveting portrait of recent Tibetan history, opening a window onto Tibetan life today, and onto the challenges Tibetans face while locked in a struggle for identity against one of the most powerful countries in the world
Escape from Camp 14
- 205pagine
- 8 ore di lettura
Twenty-six years ago, Shin Dong-hyuk was born inside Camp 14, one of five sprawling political prisons in the mountains of North Korea. This is the gripping, terrifying story of his escape from this no-exit prison-- to freedom in South Korea