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Shards Kindle Edition
Ismet Prcic’s brilliant, provocative, and energetic debut novel is about a young Bosnian, also named Ismet Prcic, who has fled his war-torn homeland and is now struggling to reconcile his past with his present life in California.
He is advised that in order to make peace with the corrosive guilt he harbors over leaving his family behind, he must “write everything.” The result is a great rattlebag of memories, confessions, and fictions: sweetly humorous recollections of Ismet’s childhood in Tuzla appear alongside anguished letters to his mother about the challenges of life in this new world. As Ismet’s foothold in the present falls away, his writings are further complicated by stories from the point of view of another young man—real or imagined—named Mustafa, who joined a troop of elite soldiers and stayed in Bosnia to fight. When Mustafa’s story begins to overshadow Ismet’s new-world identity, the reader is charged with piecing together the fragments of a life that has become eerily unrecognizable, even to the one living it.
Shards is a thrilling read—a harrowing war story, a stunningly inventive coming of age, and a heartbreaking saga of a splintered family.
“Fierce, funny and real, it also says much about war, exile, guilt and fear.” —Chicago Sun-Times, Favorite Books of 2011
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Editorial Reviews
Review
He is advised that in order to make peace with the corrosive guilt he harbors over leaving behind his family behind, he must write everything.” The result is a great rattlebag of memories, confessions, and fictions: sweetly humorous recollections of Ismet’s childhood in Tuzla appear alongside anguished letters to his mother about the challenges of life in this new world. As Ismet’s foothold in the present falls away, his writings are further complicated by stories from the point of view of another young manreal or imaginednamed Mustafa, who joined a troop of elite soldiers and stayed in Bosnia to fight. When Mustafa’s story begins to overshadow Ismet’s new-world identity, the reader is charged with piecing together the fragments of a life that has become eerily unrecognizable, even to the one living it.
Shards is a thrilling reada harrowing war story, a stunningly inventive coming of age, and a heartbreaking saga of a splintered family.
About the Author
* A Chicago Sun-Times Best Book of the Year
* An Oregonian Top 10 Northwest Book of the Year
* Shortlisted for the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Book Award and the Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Prize
* Winner of the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction
* Winner of the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award
"Impressive . . . Inventive . . . Pushes against convention, logic, chronology . . . Ambitious and deep . . . [Prcic] succeeds at writing an unsettling and powerful novel."
The New York Times Book Review
"Fierce, funny and real, it also says much about war, exile, guilt and fear."
Chicago Sun Times, Favorite books of 2011
"Prcic captures the insanity of war and its unceasing aftermath."
Publishers Weekly
"A playful but heartfelt debut . . . Brightly detailed . . . [Prcic is] a spirited, soulful talent."
Kirkus Reviews
"Brilliant . . . With verbal glee, Prcic serves up a darkly comic vision of the terrors and misunderstandings of immigration. Tight, glorious little tales-within-tales abound, rattled off with a quick, artless naturalism. . . . The writing is packed with one original metaphor after another, language that's almost drunk with colorful, startling images. . . . Brimming with scraps of memory, regrets, and rationalizations, Shards leaves an indelible scar on the reader's imagination. Prcic has pieced together a young man's story from the torn and exploded remains of his former life, and the sheer power of his language leaves the reader shaken."
Shelf Awareness
"Brutally vivid."
The Oregonian
"The experience of reading Shardsthe deliberate disorientation, the layering and morphing of events that characterize the bookreveals in a more visceral way what it might be like to live always with a full awareness of the tenuousness of civil society, of the terrible precariousness of calm."
St. Louis Beacon
"Compelling, sensual detail . . . Prcic’s prose is effective both at delineating the psychological nuances of his characters, and the sometimes-dodgy circumstances of the outside world. . . . There is a strain of dark humor running throughout, and an elastic joy in storytelling and linguistic expression that prevents this from being a simple recitation of atrocities and pain. . . . Well-written and thought-provoking . . . The story it tells is as unique and individual as the author who penned it."
PopMatters
"Experimental and brutal and heart-wrenching . . . You just give in to it, as you do when reading someone like Faulkner. . . . What makes Shards so compelling is, first of all, the language . . . which has an almost ferocious beauty. Secondly, and as important, is the organization of the book, which gives it a sense of urgency. . . . Ismet's confusion is so vivid that it becomes ours, making us participants in this story. . . . To have had such a life when you are so young is hard to convey without becoming sentimental or pathetic, yet Prcic has done it brilliantly."
The Arts Fuse
"Innovative in form and startling in its storytelling, Shards is a brilliant debut novel from Ismet Prcic."
Largehearted Boy
"Ismet Prcic has taken apart the complexities of war, love, family and home and scattered them across a novel that is as heartbreaking as it is beautiful. Shards is an original work of art, brutal and honest, and absolutely unforgettable."
Dinaw Mengestu, author of How to Read the Air
"Ismet Prcic's prose is a gleaming pinball kept in inexhaustible play, kinetically suspended in time and space, endlessly flung away from its inevitable ending, colliding with memory and invention. This is writing fed by skill, inertia, horroor, and sorrow, a survivor's story of triumph and guilt. Yet Prcic's sensibility is at once brutally and tenderly comic. Humanity seems to run deepest among those who have survived its near-absence in the world."
Brad Watson, author of The Heaven of Mercury and Aliens in the Prime of their Lives
"A brilliant debut that manages to be both experimental and emotionally resonant. Comparisons to that other Bosnian-American writer, Aleksandar Hemon, will be unavoidable, but Prcic’s work is completely and wholly his own. Shards will come to be seen as the definitive novel of the Bosnian war and its resultant diaspora."
Philipp Meyer, author of American Rust
"This novel moves at light speed, with shattering immediacy, through the parallel universe lives of two young Bosnian menwho may, in fact, be one person. Like fear, it will make you open your ears."
Rae Armantrout, author of Versed
"The reason this novel is so good, hard, beautiful, and disturbing is that there is more than one Ismet delivering the many sharp pieces. Shards feels like a primary document torn from life by a powerful new talent."
Ron Carlson, author of The Signal and Five Skies
"A passionate heart beats in these pages devoted to the reassembling of a life sundered by war. Ismet Prcic’s debut novel Shards is an outsized, outrageous, outstanding performance."
Christine Schutt, author of All Souls
"[A] heartbreaking, rude, surprisingly compassionate, and still violent story about a Bosnian refuge who is trying to make sense of his new life in southern California . . . You're not going to find many sentences in any book, anywhere, like the sentences you find here. . . . Prcic makes use of preposterous and somehow dead-on analogies and allusions, profanities and profundities. He celebrates the hieroglyphs of punctuational tics, smears words, elevates typefaces, deploys footnotes, diary entries, memoirisms, blasphemy, theater, treachery, vulgarisms, and it works. . . . This book cannot be explained. It is to be experienced. Sentence by sentence, scene by scene."
Beth Kephart
"I read the book with my mother, we were laughing, we read passages to each other, we said: Look, it’s giving me goose bumps, and then mother was crying quietly, and I thought: What a great book, what it is doing to us!"
Saša Stanišic, author of How the Soldier Repairs the Gramophone
Product details
- ASIN : B005PYMMAC
- Publisher : Black Cat; Original edition (October 4, 2011)
- Publication date : October 4, 2011
- Language : English
- File size : 3.3 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 414 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,072,101 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #2,079 in Psychological Literary Fiction
- #5,531 in Psychological Fiction (Kindle Store)
- #8,563 in Contemporary Literary Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers praise the book's storytelling, describing it as brilliant and entertaining. The writing quality receives positive feedback, with one customer highlighting it as a remarkable literary debut.
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Customers praise the storytelling in this novel, describing it as brilliant and entertaining, with one customer noting its engaging pace throughout.
"...He's a very charismatic and fun person; his charisma is evident throughout his work. He weaves a brilliant story, one the reader can get lost in...." Read more
"...the book is brilliantly written and really entertaining." Read more
"...This is one of the most remarkable novels I have ever read...." Read more
"Delicious: voice and wit, use of language. Nutritious: Solid underpinnings, an important story told with depth and breadth of insight...." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, describing it as brilliant, with one customer noting it as a remarkable literary debut.
"...taste, but it is in my Top 5 favorite novels because it is absolutely brilliant. I highly HIGHLY recommend this novel to everyone that I know...." Read more
"...(His name is Meat in the Apache unit of the army) the book is brilliantly written and really entertaining." Read more
"SHARDS has received numerous awards this year, including best first novel from The American Academy of Arts and Letters...." Read more
"Very vell presented story or memoir. It shaws how war can quickly change people against each other. Brothers yesterday,enemies today...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2013I purchased this book for one of my college courses and it is phenomenal. I had the opportunity to meet Ismet Prcic and it was one of the most amazing experiences of my life. He's a very charismatic and fun person; his charisma is evident throughout his work. He weaves a brilliant story, one the reader can get lost in. It starts off a little slow, and perhaps his style is an acquired taste, but it is in my Top 5 favorite novels because it is absolutely brilliant. I highly HIGHLY recommend this novel to everyone that I know. I can't wait to read his next novel (if he ever decides to finish and publish it, anyway...).
- Reviewed in the United States on July 14, 2014A great mixture of the novel and memoir forms. A young Bosnian called Ismet Prcic leaves his war torn country to live in California where a doctor advises him to write everything down to help him cope with his problems settling down there - this is the memoir part. The novel focuses on his life growing up in Bosnia, family problems and the eventual family breakup. It is also a really heartbreaking study of the horrors of war and the resulting shell shock. It also deals with his involvement in a drama group in Tuzla, Bosnia-Herzegovina where the author is from and how they get permission to visit a drama group in Scotland where some of the troup plan to escape. Ismet ends back in Croatia before eventually getting to California. Although it jumps back and forth in time and confuses by Ismet apparently morphing into Mustafa (His name is Meat in the Apache unit of the army) the book is brilliantly written and really entertaining.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2012SHARDS has received numerous awards this year, including best first novel from The American Academy of Arts and Letters. This is one of the most remarkable novels I have ever read. Don't be intimidated by the fragmentary aspects of the novel, because when the topic is war, murder and hatred, perhaps the only way to explore these terrible themes is by breaking the story literally into shards. A remarkable literary debut.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 12, 2013Delicious: voice and wit, use of language. Nutritious: Solid underpinnings, an important story told with depth and breadth of insight. Engaging all the way through. Needs some judicious minor editing to avoid losing momentum in the middle, always a problem with real life--even managed in fiction--because life is comprised of both rapids and eddies. I look forward to more, more, more....Kudos to Ismet!
- Reviewed in the United States on November 2, 2012Very vell presented story or memoir. It shaws how war can quickly change people against each other. Brothers yesterday,enemies today.He made it, he was lucky. Very good reading!
- Reviewed in the United States on April 29, 2014This book is full of memories of battle torn Bosnia. The author keeps the reader's attention narrating events through the eyes of two characters: Ismet himself, and Mustafa, an imaginary character. This book took me to Bosnia, made me sad and angry, took me away from all of that to find a young man who survived, heart and gifts intact.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2012Ismet Prcic is yet another young author to migrate from the former Yugoslavia to present us with the effect of the Bosnian Slaughter. While Tea Obreht presented a subtle allegory of moral weakness, hypocrisy and guilt in "The Tiger's Wife," Prcic smashes us in the face with a jolting structure that reminds me of "Slaughterhouse Five" or "The Book Thief." The story is compelling and his voice is surprising for its authentic portrayal of the profane sarcasm of American youth, a style of western speech that has apparently even infected the youth of Bosnia. But his story gradually eroded into one of psychological incapacity rather than a more biting story of a character crushed by moral choices. Nevertheless, it is a must read from a new voice in literature.
The Bosnian Slaughter began in 1992 when Ismet (the main character has the author's name) is about twelve. By sixteen, he has lived his teenage years in a war zone, moving from a small town to a city. His normal daily life became one of dodging periodic shelling from the Serbs, seeing death in the streets, struggling daily to survive through constant shortages, often living with resentful relatives. Ismet and his family are Muslim descendents from the Turks who ruled the Balkans for four hundred years but are western in their secularism.
Ismet was quiet and somewhat introverted as the story begins in a classic bildungsroman style with Ismet as a young secular, Muslim boy innocently playing with Orthodox children. He fell for a Bosnian girl at the same time the army drafted him. When an opportunity arose to possibly flee to America, his frightened mother, unable to cope with the constant danger of war, urged him to leave, knowing she would probably never see him again. Ismet, seeing acquaintances enlist in the army, fled to America, abandoning his girlfriend, fleeing the army and his family. In America, Ismet is battered by guilt and flashbacks to the daily terror of war, any bangs or loud noise causing him to dive for cover. Both he and his mother lapse into depression, Ismet racked with guilt and his mother by loneliness.
Prcic, the author, has crafted a unique portrait of Ismet's descent into depression, telling his story with quick cuts from Ismet's diary, notebooks and short-stories, all in an effort to cope with his panic attacks and depression, allowing the story to reflect all his emotions and gradual deterioration, all while trying to acclimate to the paradise of Southern California. In the hell of war, he promised love to a young woman only to flee to schizophrenia and be rejected in the pursuit of love in paradise.
Telling the story in his unique style is Prcic's strength. The reader becomes enveloped in Ismet's psychological struggles. At first the story seems to play with existentialism: Ismet choosing to drown his guilt in alcohol and drugs, throwing himself into the dark side of freedom and paradise, creating his own hell. Ismet is a young man with no identity, no philosophical or theological foundation, unable to cope with his anxiety, all the literary structure of existentialism. Then Ismet seems to slide into an existential nihilism: "The absurdity of reality ... the truth remains that nothing really changes in the great scheme of things." But he is a sensitive person, full of emotions, striving for love and connection to a new girlfriend in Southern California, which is certainly not the nihilism of "The Stranger." Finally the novel leaves us with a young man struggling with what appears to be a debilitating disease, a severe depression, inherited from his mother, a young man incapable of making rational moral choices. I understand that war is insane and, as Vonnegut wrote, when an individual cannot control, cannot determine his life, then the future is futile. But Prcic suddenly shifts from his character wallowing in the consequences of his moral choices to his character suffering the consequences of a terrible inherited disease. Depression is not insanity nor is it the consequence of moral choice. As Henry James said, what makes great literature is characters grappling with the great metaphysical questions and, as I might add, moral choices.
Prcic has crafted a compelling analysis of the subconscious, a contemporary post-modern journey into the deterioration of the mind. But the story leaves me wondering whether Ismet's consequence was the result of guilt from his overt choice to flee every emotional attachment in his life for personal safety or only his diseased-racked brain's inability to rationalize. While the ending of this story subtracts from its power, Prcic could mature into an accomplished experimental writer.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 13, 2012The Kindle sample is great and leads you to think you will get a good feeling of what it was like to be a Bosnian youth swept up in the war then able to emigrate to the US. However, the vignettes following the sample are very different. For example, watching your grandmother kill a chicken when you are 3 years old doesn't have much to do with the war in Bosnia (besides being nothing like my own experience watching my father kill chickens). I think the sample should be longer. And the book should be characterized as a memoir.
Top reviews from other countries
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SuperdupertypReviewed in Germany on August 13, 2013
4.0 out of 5 stars nett...
Ich hatte gehofft etwas über die Auseinandersetzung der Kulturen, den schwelenden Konflikt und den daraus resultierenden Krieg zu lernen. Allerdings ist das Buch eine Biografie mit einer sehr persönlichen Sichtweise. Der Autor erzählt seine Geschichte und die erzählt er unterhaltsam. That's it. - Daher: Nett -