|
Travels in American Iraq | 
enlarge | Author: John Martinkus Publisher: Black (Aus) Category: Book
List Price: $17.95 Buy New: $1.95 You Save: $16.00 (89%)
New (11) Used (13) from $0.06
Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 1493644
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 202 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 4.8 x 0.7
ISBN: 1863952853 Dewey Decimal Number: 323 EAN: 9781863952859 ASIN: 1863952853
Publication Date: October 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: New ..... No remainder marks/unread condition.......Gift worthy condition... Smoke/pet free.... USPS D.C. at no additional charge. ****Please read all listings carefully, it's your responsibility to know what you are purchasing at the time of your order.****
| |
| Editorial Reviews:
Book Description Rare insight into the realities of liberation and the limits of U.S. power. When the Coalition of the Willing liberated Iraq from the yoke of Saddam in early 2003, George W. Bush announced that the second Gulf War was over. This account demonstrates just the opposite. Martinkus has the courage to say what the mainstream press cannot. He spent eight weeks in and around Baghdad in early 2004, he shows that, amidst a developing guerrilla war and a chaotic reconstruction, the line between liberation and occupation has become stretched. Tracing the ever-widening gap between rhetoric and reality, Eight Weeks in Baghdad takes readers to the heart of the political and religious struggles surrounding the hand-over of power in mid-2004. Vividly describing people and places, the author evokes the everyday life.
|
| Customer Reviews:
Impartial Journeys In a Very Dangerous Land November 8, 2005 Earlier this year Australian freelance photojournalist John Martinkus spent seven weeks travelling Iraq. He goes beyond the supposedly safe Green Zone in central Baghdad, driving from one trouble spot to another accompanied by his ex-Iraqi Air Force translator. He isn't embedded with anyone. Now this journey would be suicidal. Then it was just dangerous beyond belief. The prologue of the book opens with him in the midst of gore of the second March 2004 Karbala Bombing. Martinkus had been only 100 meters away when it went off. Returning to Baghdad that night, his exhausted shock only just deadens the horror of flicking out with his pen the pieces of brain and flesh stuck in the soles of his boots. Outside of the now notorious Abu Ghraib prison, he spoke freely to the crowds of men and woman who had family members detained inside. He melted away moments before been detained by US soldiers. A week later Coalition troops would rip apart a similar crowd with heavy machine gun fire. Martinkus journeys from Baghdad down to Basra by train. The train station in Baghdad is intact, built by the British as the last stop for the Orient Express. They are the only passengers on the train. It is supposed to be safe because insurgents know there is nothing on it to steal. In Basra he meets a supporter of the now renegade Shiite cleric Moqutada al-Sadr. A man whose brother drowned on a refugee boat, which sunk between Indonesia and Australia in October 2001, drowning 349 Iraqis, confronts him. John Howard disavowed any responsibility for the disaster. "I recall thinking, `Great, now I am going to be killed thanks to Howard's asylum seeker policy." Any illusions that Iraq is peacefully moving towards democracy are dispelled. Rather then resorting to heavy-handed ideology, he proves this with interwoven vignettes of eyewitness accounts, and interviews representing a diverse range of opinions. Martinkus's book is important because just as we start to become jaded about Iraq, it reminds as of the story we will never get just by watching the evening news.
|
|
| Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |