In this superb, shattering book of testimonies, Pete Ayrton has organised the best of all introductions to the Spanish Civil War. It's not a history, but the experiences of 38 men and women - some famous names, others little known - as the twentieth century for the first time showed its true face in western Europe: the dazzling hope, the betrayals and the disillusions, the merciless cruelty and the desperate heroism. Malraux, Sartre, Laurie Lee, Arthur Koestler and George Orwell are among the witnesses here. Not all were on the anti-Fascist side; some were not even born, but now look back on the fate of their older generation with pity and horror. They and the survivors in this book are asking what remains of it all beyond the pain. -- Neil Ascherson<br />From the reviews of No Man's Land:
'The essential collection of writing from the First World War * Times *<br />The real strength of No Man's Land is the sheer diversity of the voices it offers, especially those from fronts often overlooked or considered peripheral in the United States and Britain. * New York Times *<br />As diverse in attitudes as it is in geography ... a tribute to the art of translation ... marvellous. * Times Literary Supplement *<br />Splendid ... the war, in all its calculated cruelty, its human impact, its formidable weapons of death and destruction and - yes - its futility, is captured brilliantly in this remarkable, wide-ranging anthology. * Herald *<br />Superb ... an impressive anthology that bears an extraordinary cargo of human experience, and is an enlightenment for those who think only of the western front when they remember the first world war. -- Helen Dunmore * Financial Times *<br />Trail-blazing .... * Independent *

Hope, resignation, despair, sadness, humour, confusion, ruthlessness, compassion, kindness, generosity and love inhabit Pete Ayrton's anthology of writings from the Spanish Civil War: there is little sense of certainty and still less of triumphalism among the bewilderingly diverse Republican and Nationalist coalitions, all shades of which are represented here. Previous collections privileged the writings of the International Brigades over those of the Spanish, sometimes excluding them altogether. !No Pasaran! corrects the balance: by far the largest contingent of its thirty-five writers are Spanish, including Luis Bunuel, Manuel Rivas, Javier Cercas, Arturo Barea, Joan Sales and Chaves Nogales. The remainder offer contrasting perspectives of participants in the conflict from America (among them John Dos Passos, Muriel Rukeyser and Langston Hughes); Italy (Curzio Malaparte and Leonardo Sciascia); France (Jean-Paul Sartre, Andre Malraux and others); Germany (Gustav Regler); Russia (Victor Serge); Great Britain (including Arthur Koestler, George Orwell and Laurie Lee); Cuba, Argentina and Mexico. Pete Ayrton brings together hauntingly vivid stories from a bitterly fought war. This is powerful writing that allows the reader to witness life behind and at the front lines of both sides.
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International writing from the Spanish Civil War, from both behind and at the front line

Product details

ISBN
9781846689970
Published
2016-04-21
Publisher
Profile Books Ltd
Weight
674 gr
Height
240 mm
Width
162 mm
Thickness
37 mm
Age
01, G
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
416

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Biographical note

Pete Ayrton was born in London in 1943. After studying and briefly teaching philosophy, a period of left-wing tourism in France and Italy led to his learning to read and converse in these languages, and to take part in the intense, opaque discourses of Marxism. A period of work as translator led to a job as editor with Pluto Press and to his founding in 1986 of Serpent's Tail with the specific remit of publishing fiction in translation; this includes two First World War classics Frederic Manning's Her Privates We and Gabriel Chevallier's Fear, both represented in No Man's Land.