Amazon.co.uk Review
Safe Area Gorazde is a harrowing documentary comic destined to become a classic of war reporting. In the waning days of the Bosnian war, Joe Sacco, the cartoonist behind the acclaimed
Palestine, made several visits to Gorazde, a UN "safe area" that had been repeatedly attacked by Serb forces. He interviewed survivors of the Serb siege and assembled their recollections. Sacco depicts the atrocities of the war in simple, restrained panels, but his attention to detail is everywhere, from the accurate renderings of mortar scars on the landscape to the history lessons carefully embedded throughout the comic.
Sacco never descends into sensationalism or exploitation of the war's victims, but instead adopts a subjective gaze that places readers in hiding spots from which they can only catch glimpses of the murders and rapes. Sacco leaves the particulars of these crimes up to the imagination of his readers, which is appropriate enough given the unthinkable nature of what took place in Gorazde.
The real impact of Safe Area lies in Sacco's immersion in the daily life of Gorazde. While other journalists left Gorazde as soon as they had the clips they needed, Sacco lived in the town for weeks at a time, becoming a vicarious resident. Although the conflict was largely over by this point, Gorazde was still surrounded and Sacco was an eyewitness to his friends' struggle not only to survive but also to maintain their sanity.
Safe Area is not just a catalogue of horrors and a condemnation of international indifference; it's also a moving portrayal of the human capacity to endure almost any hardship. Sacco refuses to fall into any clichés about the triumph of the human spirit here--the people of Gorazde themselves reject such notions--but he does offer up Safe Area as a testament to its survival. --Peter Darbyshire, Amazon.ca
Review
Harrowing and bleakly humorous, Sacco's account of life during theBalkan conflict is a timeless portrait of ordinary people caught in desperatecircumstances. It's also a work of genius in an unlikely genre: journalism incomic book form.
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
Scotland on Sunday
"an authentic portrayal of the plight of common folk caught up in
conflict"
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
The Irish Times: Rev'd Katherine Farmar
`harrowing, frightening, and intensely powerful... the horror of
the situation is allowed to speak for itself.'
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
Synopsis
Comic strips reveal the lives of those living in the Muslim enclave of Gorazde during the Bosian war, describing how they survived Serbian attacks that left them without access to the outside world, electricity, or running water.
From the Publisher
The first UK publication of Joe Saccos classic, groundbreaking work of comics journalism with a foreword by Christopher Hitchens.
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
About the Author
Joe Sacco was born in Malta. He won an American Book Award for
Palestine. He is also the author of
Notes from a Defeatist and
The Fixer.
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.