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Hardcover ISBN: 0-8027-1416-1 Price: $24.00 224 pages Size: 5-1/2 x 8-1/2 April 2003
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Paperback ISBN: 0-8027-7692-2 Price: $14.00 208 pages Size: 5-1/2 x 8-1/4 March 2004
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Paperback ISBN: 0-8027-7692-2 Price: $13.00 208 pages Size: 5-1/2 x 8-1/4 March 2004
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Talk of the Devil
Encounters with Seven Dictators
Riccardo Orizio
Untitled Document
“I
encouraged them to voice their thoughts, these one-time tyrants.
But I deliberately chose those who had fallen from power in disgrace,
because those who fall on their feet tend not to examine their
own conscience.”
—Riccardo Orizio |
NOW IN PAPERBACKInspired by newspaper clippings he had kept about two former African
dictators accused of cannibalism, journalist Riccardo Orizio set out
to track down tyrants around the world who had fallen from power—to
see if they had gained any perspective on their actions, or if their
lives and thoughts could shed any light on our own. The seven encounters
chronicled in Talk of the Devil
reveal Orizio’s gift as an observer and his skill
at getting people to reveal themselves. They are also, each of them,
memorable stories in their own right.
Thanks to his conversion to Islam, the unrepentant Idi Amin lives in
exile in Saudi Arabia and laughs off his murderous past while still
attempting to meddle in Uganda. Jean-Bedel Bokassa, the bloody former
emperor of Central Africa, boasts astonishingly that Pope Paul VI had
nominated him as the thirteenth apostle of the Catholic Church. Nexhmije
Hoxha defends her husband’s brutal Stalinist regime from her Albanian
prison cell and proudly explains how it worked. Paris-based Jean-Claude
“Baby Doc” Duvalier—in his first interview since fleeing
Haiti in 1986—speaks about voodoo and the women of his life, and
laments the loss of his fortune. Colonel Mengistu Haile-Mariam of Ethiopia,
Mira Markovic (Slobodan Milosevic’s wife), and General Wojciech
Jaruzelski, the former Polish head of state, all claim, in one way or
another, that history will do them justice.
By turns chilling and comical, rational and absurd, Talk
of the Devil brings back into focus forgotten history
and people we have viewed as evil incarnate. Stripped of their power
and titles, they are oddly human, and in Orizio’s hands, their
stories, and his own, are compulsively readable.
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