The Book Of Calamities: Five Questions about Suffering and its Meaning
By (Author) Peter Trachtenberg
Little, Brown & Company
Little, Brown & Company
12th February 2009
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
128.4
Hardback
464
Width 150mm, Height 215mm, Spine 35mm
591g
What does it mean to suffer What enables some people to emerge from tragedy while others are spiritually crushed by it Why do so many Americans think of suffering as something that happens to other people - who usually deserve it These are some of the questions at the heart of this powerful book.
Combining reportage, personal narrative and moral philosophy, Peter Trachtenberg tells the stories of grass-roots genocide tribunals in Rwanda and tsunami survivors in Sri Lanka, an innocent man on death row, and a family bereaved on 9/11. He examines texts from the Book of Job to the Bodhicharyavatara and the writings of Simone Weil. THE BOOK OF CALAMITIES is a provocative and sweeping look at one of the biggest paradoxes of the human condition - and the surprising strength and resilience of those who are forced to confront it.This book succeeds because it asks the right questions, calls on the experience of articulate witnesses and - through skilful narrative and trenchant observation - beguiles the reader into facing heartbreaking reality * PUBLISHERS WEEKLY *
Peter Trachtenberg's essays and short stories have appeared in The New Yorker, Harper's, TriQuarterly and the Jewish Forward and have been broadcast on NPR's 'All Things Considered'. He received the Nelson Algren Award for Short Fiction and the Jerome Lowell DeJur Award for Fiction from the City College of New York