Love & Obstacles, By Aleksandar Hemon

Reviewed,Boyd Tonkin
Thursday 15 April 2010 19:00 EDT
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With guile and gusto, these eight stories abound in beautifully oblique sidelong and backwards glances at the genocidal war in Hemon's Bosnian homeland. Hemon – the refugee genius, Sarajevo-born, stranded in Chicago in 1992, hand-to-mouth survivor of America's worst jobs – sends up the familiar myth of himself.

Rueful and self-disparaging, retailing each mishap in a prose that fizzes with dark wit, the narrator often warns about the risks of confusing art and life. The nearest we get to the front-line of Bosnia's tragedy comes in a comic allegory of schoolkids who try to recapture a "garden of freedom" - a fable just as ferocious as Lord of the Flies, but much funnier.

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