A New York Times Editors' Choice
These essays are written on the skin of the times. Dubravka Ugresic,
winner of the Neustadt International Prize and one of Europe's most
influential writers, with biting humor and a multitude of cultural
references--from La La Land and Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, to
tattoos and body modification, World Cup chants, and the preservation of
Lenin's corpse--takes on the dreams, hopes, and fears of modern life.
The collapse of Yugoslavia, and the author's subsequent exile from
Croatia, leads to reflections on nationalism and the intertwining of
crime and politics. Ugresic writes at eye level, from a human
perspective, in portraits of people from the former Eastern Bloc, who
work as cleaners in the Netherlands or start underground shops with
products from their country of origin.
A rare and welcome combination of irony, compassion, and a sharp polemic
gaze characterizes these beautiful and highly relevant essays.