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  • Published: 30 November 2011
  • ISBN: 9781448112111
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320
Categories:

Between Mountains





'An eloquent combination of war report, courtroom drama and love story... elegant, enjoyable as well as moving' - Sunday Telegraph

Maggie Helwig's stunning British debut is an extraordinary war novel, a poignant and gripping story about the ripples that carry on long after the fighting is over, and about two people kept apart by history, ethics and human frailty.

Daniel is a war correspondent in Bosnia, a loner and a truthteller, up to a point, careless with everything except his sources. Lili is an interpreter, based in Paris, careful and meticulous. But when she finds herself working for the war crimes tribunal in The Hague, fails to declare her fragile relationship with Daniel.

Between Mountains is a compelling novel of immediacy and power, about love and language, truth and lies, war crimes and the weight of history - with a vividly evoked and frighteningly real supporting cast of war criminals, lawyers, refugees and journalists.

  • Published: 30 November 2011
  • ISBN: 9781448112111
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320
Categories:

About the author

Maggie Helwig

Born in Liverpool, Maggie Helwig grew up in London and Kingston, Ontario, and now lives in Toronto. A writer and poet, she has worked as a music journalist, and an international human rights advocate, and travelled in Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and elsewhere in Europe, as well as South America. She is married with one daughter.

Praise for Between Mountains

Between Mountains...[is] a profound gesture of remembrance, as well as a deeply moving work of art

Michael Redhill, author of Martin Sloane

A candid and moving account of the struggle to reconcile the past with hope for the future

Guardian

A passionate and poetic love story which never flinches from its task of exploring the way history compromises our lives

Ben Richards, author of The Mermaids and the Drunks

Profound...elegantly written...it is at once a tender love story, a compelling narrative about recent history, and an unflinching account of human cruelty and sacrifice

Literary Review

This challenging dark chronicle of modern Europe touches the same nerves as Rachel Seiffert's The Dark Room

Guardian