French ethnologist Francois Bizot's The Gate offers a unique insight into the rise of the Khmer Rouge. In 1971 Bizot was studying ancient Buddhist traditions and living with his Khmer partner and daughter in a small village in the environs of the Angkor temple complex. The Khmer Rouge was fighting a guerilla war in rural Cambodia; during a routine visit to a nearby temple, Bizot and his two Khmer colleagues were captured by them and imprisoned deep in the jungle on suspicion of working for the CIA. On trial for his life, over the next three months Bizot developed a strong relationship with his captor, Comrade Douch, who would later become the Khmer Rouge's chief interrogator and commandant of the horrifying Tuol Sleng prison where thousands of captives were tortured prior to execution. The portrait Bizot gives of the young schoolteacher-turned revolutionary and their interaction is simultaneously fascinating and terrifying.
Finally freed after Douch had pleaded his case with the leadership, Bizot became the only Western captive of the Khmer Rouge ever to be released alive, but his story does not end there. On his return to Phnom Penh, due to his fluency in Khmer, he was appointed interpreter between the occupying forces and the remaining western nationals holed up in the French embassy. As the interlocutor at the eponymous gate, he relates with dreadful resignation the moment when the Khmer nationals in the compound were ordered out by the Khmer Rouge forces for "resettlement."
Bizot's is a touching and gripping account of one of the darkest moments in modern history and it is told with a unique voice. As a Cambodian resident, a lover of Cambodia and a fluent Khmer speaker, Bizot shows an understanding of the prevailing mood in the country that other Western commentators have failed to capture effectively, while as a Western academic he is able to see the forces at work and how Cambodia fits into the bigger picture of South East Asian conflict. What emerges is a tale of a land plunged into insanity and Bizot tells it like a eulogy for a dead friend and a confrontation of old demons. The Gate is a stunning book and a must for anyone interested in this grim period of Asian history. --Duncan Thomson
From Publishers Weekly
"It's better to have a sparsely populated Cambodia than a country full of incompetents!" The speaker of this chilling statement is Douch, the Khmer Rouge true believer who ran the camp that held French ethnologist Bizot for the closing months of 1971, several years before the Marxist revolutionaries unleashed massive bloodshed on the small Southeast Asian country. In 1975, the Khmer Rouge's chaotic occupation of Phnom Penh confined the small French community in the city to the premises of the French embassy, the portal of which supplies this volume with its title. Married to a Cambodian citizen, Bizot was an unusual Westerner there, in that once the terror started, he showed little inclination to flee the country. Bizot exploited his status as a rare Khmer-speaking Westerner not only to escape execution but also to extract a measure of autonomy for himself. He frequently showed remarkable defiance toward his heavily armed and ruthless captors. Bizot's account maintains a melancholy tone throughout. Despite his frequent heroic acts, Bizot emphasizes his own frailty and weakness-when he's not looking to set the record straight. He remains especially angry at Western leftists who insisted that the Vietnamese played little role in Cambodia despite ample evidence to the contrary. What's especially striking is the apparent contradiction between Bizot's sympathetic portrait of Douch and his description of the countless murders Douch committed in the name of the revolution. For many Americans, the senseless tragedy of Cambodia remains a mystery; this elegant volume helps outline the contours of that tragedy from a unique perspective. Maps. 40,000 first printing.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
这本书是在金边中央市场前,从一个被地雷炸断双脚的残疾人手中买来的盗版书。印刷质量很差。当时花了10美元买了两本。但一直没读。直到最近。对于红色高棉的集中营和杀人工厂,或许多多少少都听过。但对于白人来说则是意外。作者是一位法国人类学家,当时正在吴哥窟搞野外考察...
评分这本书是在金边中央市场前,从一个被地雷炸断双脚的残疾人手中买来的盗版书。印刷质量很差。当时花了10美元买了两本。但一直没读。直到最近。对于红色高棉的集中营和杀人工厂,或许多多少少都听过。但对于白人来说则是意外。作者是一位法国人类学家,当时正在吴哥窟搞野外考察...
评分这本书是在金边中央市场前,从一个被地雷炸断双脚的残疾人手中买来的盗版书。印刷质量很差。当时花了10美元买了两本。但一直没读。直到最近。对于红色高棉的集中营和杀人工厂,或许多多少少都听过。但对于白人来说则是意外。作者是一位法国人类学家,当时正在吴哥窟搞野外考察...
评分这本书是在金边中央市场前,从一个被地雷炸断双脚的残疾人手中买来的盗版书。印刷质量很差。当时花了10美元买了两本。但一直没读。直到最近。对于红色高棉的集中营和杀人工厂,或许多多少少都听过。但对于白人来说则是意外。作者是一位法国人类学家,当时正在吴哥窟搞野外考察...
评分这本书是在金边中央市场前,从一个被地雷炸断双脚的残疾人手中买来的盗版书。印刷质量很差。当时花了10美元买了两本。但一直没读。直到最近。对于红色高棉的集中营和杀人工厂,或许多多少少都听过。但对于白人来说则是意外。作者是一位法国人类学家,当时正在吴哥窟搞野外考察...
坦白说,我一开始被这本书的封面设计吸引,但真正留住我的,是它那股子“不妥协”的精神。作者拒绝走任何一条容易的路子,他敢于直面人性的幽暗角落,毫不留情地撕开温情脉脉的假象,直抵核心的腐朽与挣扎。这本书的语言风格非常独特,有时是古典的华美,转瞬又变成粗粝的现实主义,这种强烈的反差感营造了一种独特的张力。我特别留意了那些环境描写中出现的象征手法,它们虽然隐晦,但能量巨大,推动着情节在潜意识层面进行演变。阅读体验像是在攀登一座陡峭的山峰,过程艰辛,但登顶时所见的风景却是无可替代的壮阔。这本书不仅仅是娱乐,它更像是一剂猛药,能帮你清醒地审视生活中的那些“必需的谎言”。对于寻求深刻、拒绝平庸的读者来说,这是不容错过的佳作。
评分看完这本书,我唯一的感受就是“震撼”二字已不足以形容。它带来的冲击力是多层次的,不仅仅在情节上,更在认知层面上。作者的文风极其成熟老练,字里行间透露出一种洞悉世事的清醒与冷静,即使描绘最极端的情感冲突,也保持着一种高贵而疏离的视角。我个人非常喜欢其中对“时间”这一概念的处理,它似乎被拉伸、扭曲,角色的记忆和现实不断交织,让读者也难以分辨何为虚妄,何为真实。这种叙事上的模糊性,恰恰是其高明之处,它迫使我们去质疑我们所认为的“确定性”。这本书可能不适合心浮气躁的读者,因为它需要耐心去品味那些留白之处,去感受那些未明言的悲剧。这是一部需要被反复阅读和沉思的作品,每次重读都会有新的发现。
评分这绝对是我近年来读到的最有“野心”的一部作品。它的世界观设定极其宏大,但作者并没有陷入自嗨式的堆砌设定中,而是巧妙地将这些复杂的背景融入到个体命运的叙事中。我必须得赞扬一下作者对历史感的塑造,即便是虚构的故事,也让人感受到一种厚重的历史积淀,仿佛这本书本身就承载着某种古老的秘密。阅读过程中,我经常需要停下来,查阅一些背景资料,以更好地理解角色们所处的时代困境。这种需要主动参与构建理解的过程,反而极大地增强了阅读的沉浸感。这本书的结构非常精妙,像一个多棱镜,从不同的角度折射出同一主题的不同侧面,每一次转换视角都带来全新的感悟。对于那些喜欢挑战思维边界,不满足于线性叙事的读者来说,这本书无疑是一份绝佳的礼物。
评分说实话,我一开始对这本书的期待值并不算特别高,毕竟市面上同类题材的作品太多了,总觉得少了一点新意。但读进去之后,立刻被那种扑面而来的“真实感”震撼了。这里的“真实”,不是指事件的写实性,而是情感的共振。角色们做出的每一个决定,都带着强烈的宿命感和无可逃避的后果,让人在阅读过程中不断地捏紧拳头,为他们感到揪心。作者非常擅长使用环境描写来烘托气氛,比如阴郁的天气、斑驳的光影,都成了角色心境的延伸。我特别喜欢看那些对话片段,简短,却掷地有声,充满了潜台词,需要读者自己去解码其中的深意。这本书的篇幅不算短,但阅读体验极其高效,没有一处赘述,每一次翻页都充满了对下一步发展的期待。看完之后,我感觉自己仿佛经历了一场漫长而疲惫的旅程,但收获却是巨大的。
评分这本书的叙事节奏简直让人欲罢不能,作者对细节的把握达到了近乎偏执的程度,每一个场景的构建都仿佛在我眼前徐徐展开。我尤其欣赏他对于人物内心世界的描摹,那种微妙的挣扎、隐秘的渴望,都被刻画得入木三分。故事的主线流畅而有力,但真正精彩之处在于那些不经意间散落的支线情节,它们如同精巧的暗线,最终汇聚成一股强大的情感洪流。我花了好几个小时,仅仅为了回味其中一处关于选择与后果的哲学探讨,那种沉甸甸的感觉,让你不得不停下来,审视自己的人生轨迹。这本书的文字本身就具有一种韵律感,读起来像是在聆听一曲精心编排的交响乐,高潮迭起,低回婉转。它不仅仅是一个故事,更像是一次对人性复杂性的深刻探险,我强烈推荐给所有对深度阅读有追求的读者。
评分还给Lizzie前复印一本!
评分还给Lizzie前复印一本!
评分一本很重要的事,涉及历史,政治,心理学,宗教,写得很好(读过原版)
评分一本很重要的事,涉及历史,政治,心理学,宗教,写得很好(读过原版)
评分一本很重要的事,涉及历史,政治,心理学,宗教,写得很好(读过原版)
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