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Blurb: “By Jules Roy
Introduction by David Schoenbrun
Translated by Richard Howard
In the summer of 1960 Jules Roy, a distinguished novel its and playwright, an ex-colonel in the French Air Force, and a third-generation French-Algerian, returned to his war-torn native land in an attempt to "dig into the dungpile" of the bitter six-year-old struggle. The resulting book, which appeared in the late fall of 1960 in France, became an immediate best-seller, and caused more controversy than any book published that year.
Uniquely qualified by his background to write this
book, Roy visited his family and friends, a number of
typical Algerian towns ravaged by the long war of attrition, went on a night patrol along the barbed-wire andmine-laden Algerian-Tunisian border, and visited refugee camps in Tunisia. From his observations and recorded conversations with people on both sides emerges a document which is undoubtedly the most moving and compelling evaluation of what the London Observer has called "a struggle that is worse than war."