This is a book, written by
Anthony Loyd, which covers his time as a
war correspondent in
Bosnia, and
Chechnya, during the early to mid nineties. Mr. Loyd's work oscillates between his
smack filled existence in
London, and the
killing fields of the
Balkans. I can't really explain what it is about this book that I find so interesting, but I've probably read through it two or three times. There's something about the way he describes the
war, it really feels like they could be
fighting in your back yard (not in the unnecessary "it could happen here!" way, but more of a "
see, these are real people" way). There's also the fact that the
Bosnian War isn't exactly considered a major European war by some people, and so doesn't really receive the
in-depth analysis it probably deserves. Basically the whole work is filled with death, mayhem, and
heroin abuse, but it does make for some interesting
anecdotes.