Guantanamo

Dorothea Dieckmann
2.86
50 ratings 8 reviews
At the beginning of the Afghan war, young Rashid, born in Hamburg to an Indian father and a German mother, travels to India to claim an inheritance. There, he befriends a young Afghan and continues his journey to Peshawar, where he ends up in the middle of an anti-American demonstration. He is arrested, handed over to the Americans, and taken to the notorious Guantanamo. What ensues is a remarkable literary experiment, a novel based on meticulous research. In six scenes, it describes Rashid’s life at the camp. Sensitive yet utterly unsentimental, the novel explores the existential consequences of isolation, suppression, and uncertainty — paralyzing fear, psychotic delusions, manic identification with fellow prisoners, and ultimately, resignation. Written with fierce moral clarity and a remarkable economy of expression, Guantanamo functions as both a political statement and a fascinating examination of the prisoner/jailer relationship.
Genres: Fiction
160 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
4 (8%)
4 star
9 (18%)
3 star
17 (34%)
2 star
16 (32%)
1 star
4 (8%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Dorothea Dieckmann