Reviews for Shattered lens : a war photographer's story of survival

Library Journal
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In this thrilling memoir, war photographer Alpeyrie, who has worked in more than a dozen conflict zones, here writing with poet and translator Luczkiw, recounts his experience as a hostage of Syrian rebels. The narrative quickly launches into the events that led up to Alpeyrie's capture in April 2013, when for 81 days, he was bound and tortured. As the account unfolds, the author unveils parts of the story that brought him to the region and, with details of his imprisonment, humanizes his young captors. They watch American movies together, he teaches them how to swim and tries to learn their language and culture. Alpeyrie's perspective is molded by his fascination with and desire to understand all sides of a conflict, even those generally seen as the "bad guys.'' To him, all warfare, no matter the players or the reasons, is a cancer. VERDICT While Alpeyrie's story isn't unusual, not many journalists and photographers have come forward to speak about their experiences of violence, kidnapping, and danger overseas. For readers interested in current events, true accounts of war and thrill-seeking adventure, and journalism. [See Prepub Alert, 5/1/17.]-Heidi Uphoff, Sandia National Laboratories, NM © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

A keen photojournalist's eye serves Alpeyrie well as he painstakingly recounts his capture in 2013 by rebels during Syria's civil war. The Paris-born American is an extraordinary observer of the suspenseful (as when plotting an elaborate escape attempt) and the routine (as when describing the defiance of unscrewing a light tube so he could sleep at night) activities that a hostage must reconcile in order to keep his sanity. Beyond the fascinating details he provides, Alpeyrie is a sympathetic narrator, sober about the causes of war and his relative suffering in it (he is beaten, often chained to his bed, and is forced to urinate into and drink from the same glass). The second half of the book serves as a forum for his open-minded, authoritative views on geopolitics, the clash of cultures, his own profession, and the ethics and intrigue of hostage taking that are as engaging and honest as the account of his ordeal. Throughout, he offers frank discussions about the illusion of freedom and the lure of violence, and offers a touching appreciation for the parental love and support he receives. The author both humanizes and scrutinizes his captors, whom he provides with tips on working out, having sex (which he demonstrates on a pillow), and swimming at a nearby pool. In this harrowing story, Alpeyrie offers insights that deserve attention. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

There's something about the thrill of surviving a brush with death that begs repetition, writes Alpeyrie, contributor to Polaris Images, who was captured by rebels during his third trip to photograph the Syrian conflict, in April 2013. He was chained to a bed, beaten, and tortured. There's a lot at stake for a freelance war photographer, but the question of life or death seems to take a backseat when a single photograph can serve as an icon of that particular confluence of events in history. More than offering a chronicle of nearly three months in captivity, Alpeyrie, with the help of his coauthors, guides readers through an existence in which hope and despair seem interchangeable, especially in light of false promises by his captors and his knowledge of the kidnapping of two other freelance journalists, including James Foley, who was executed on camera about a year after the author was rescued. For all his suffering, Alpeyrie expresses, in words and color photographs, the compassion of a global citizen seeing beyond his personal terror and into the nuances of human interactions.--Tempone, Frank Copyright 2017 Booklist


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syria's bloody civil war swallows up an intrepid French-American photojournalist secretly struggling with his own ambivalence about the seductive nature of conflict and violence.In 2013, at various points in his 81 days of captivity at the hands of a ragtag force bent on toppling President Bashar al-Assad, Alpeyrie alternately found himself fantasizing about fighting his kidnappers and dashing for the hills at the earliest possible opportunity. There were also those times when he longed for the chance to sit and watch Arab variety shows with his tormenters. That the author wound up on Facebook at the conclusion of his punishing ordeal, curious about the welfare of the same gunmen who terrorized him for almost three month highlights the depths of inner turmoil roiling inside the veteran photographer. It was Stockholm syndrome coupled with a journalist's heightened ability to recognize all angles of an evolving story. Alpeyrie's often harrowing biographical tale is split between his time in Syrian captivity and his life immediately after a hefty ransom was paid for his release. Like many who have come before him, the author's dance with death left him yearning for even more dangerous adventures. Readers hoping for special insight into the geopolitical issues involved in the Syrian War will come away disappointed, as Alpeyrie views the ongoing carnage in the Middle East as a sort of inscrutable mess. "From a wide-angle perspective," he writes, "this whole Syrian War struck me as a historical clusterfuck that could even help set off some global Armageddon." What the author does offer is a chilling tale about how he managed to win the fragile esteem of his captors while simultaneously keeping his fried nerves from completely shorting out, as well as his personal take on armed conflict and global jihad. A gripping account of life in captivity and humankind's ongoing relationship to war. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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