Bulletproof hearts: LasĖva Valley, Bosnia and Herzegovina. 1992-93 - Disturbed dreams: Mogadishu and Sagaalaad, Somalia, 1993-94 - Sharia: Madina District, Somalia, 1994 - Truth elusive: Johannesburg, South Africa, 1994 - Strange sanctuary, Luanda, Angola, 1994 - Journey through Mozambique, Mozambique, October 1994 - God's hand. Goma, Zaire, 1994 - Land of infinite sorrow, Kigali and Gatonde. Rwanda. 1995 - Aliens, Johannesburg, South Africa, 1995 - Trail of revenge, Msinga, KwaZulu-Natal, 1995 - The cigarette ware, Belaur, Bihar province, India, 1995 - Written in blood and tears, Grozny, Chechnya, 1995 - Saudi, Khobar, Saudi Arabia, 1996 - Fashion in grey, Pretoria, South Africa, 1996 - The adoration of Abu Ammar, Hebron, Palestine, 1997 - The Lord's Children, Gulu, Northern Uganda, 1998 - Ma Afrika, Sharpeville, South Africa, 1960 - Magical idealism, Soweto, South Africa, 2000 - Small boys, big guns, Freetown, Sierra Leone, 2004 - Fence-jumping, Beitbridge border post, South Africa-Zimbabwe, 2007 - Bitter fruit, Thokoza, South Africa, 2011 - A tortured tree, small koppie, Marikana, May 2013 - Trump time: Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 2016.
Summary:
Award-winning photojournalist Greg Marinovich has covered war and conflict throughout Africa and the world. In Shots from the Edge he recounts his experiences in these hotspots, and recalls his encounters with rebels, child soldiers, illegal immigrants, militia members, peacekeepers, aid workers, genocide survivors and orphans, each with a remarkable story to tell. With compassion and care, Marinovich documents more than two decades' worth of turbulent history and reveals the human side of the conflicts. Some of the moments are deeply moving and profound; others so surreal as to blur into insanity. Covering South Africa, Angola, Mozambique, Somalia, Rwanda, Uganda, Sierra Leone, Bosnia, Chechnya, India, Saudi Arabia, Palestine and Trump's America, this book exposes the reader to extraordinary people, places and experience. The accounts in Shots from the Edge are insightful, tragic, shocking and occasionally humorous, but above all they are a poignant reminder of the brutality and indignity of war, and of people's resilience under the most hostile circumstances.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.