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Philippe Sands's Reading List

Philippe Sands KC is Professor of the Public Understanding of Law at University College London where he directs the Project on International Courts and Tribunals . He is also a barrister at Matrix Chambers . He is President of English PEN and won the Baillie Gifford Prize in 2016 for East West Street: On the Origins of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity.

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The British Academy Book Prize: The 2022 Shortlist (2022)

Scraped from fivebooks.com (2022-10-03).

Source: fivebooks.com

Katie Booth · Buy on Amazon
"I learned a lot about Alexander Graham Bell from this book because in my mind he was very much associated with the invention of the telephone. I was in Canada a few years ago and found myself in the town where the cable had arrived, and the first transatlantic call was made. It was all quite exciting, but I didn’t know about his relationship to deafness. He was surrounded by people who were deaf: his mother, his wife. It’s a very powerful story of how he went about technologically, politically and personally to enable people who were deaf to communicate through the use of this new contraption. As you’re reading this book, you’re applying the values of the 2020s to events that were no doubt wholly noble when they were being carried out, but with the benefit of hindsight, don’t look quite so great. That’s one of the aspects of the book that I found completely fascinating. He doesn’t come out looking like a hero by the values of our society today. I think that is one of the themes that cuts across all these books, whether it’s time, or place, or subject matter: what values do you take to look through the lens at a particular person’s activities? It’s very easy, with the benefit of where I sit today, to adopt a rather critical eye of what he was up to, and yet, we have to put ourselves back to those times and try to understand the context in which he was trying to help people, no doubt with the best of intentions. I found that very, very interesting. But you’re absolutely right, he doesn’t come out of it looking like a gold-embossed hero. That story is really well told. It’s a wonderfully written book."
Harald Jähner & Shaun Whiteside (translator) · Buy on Amazon
"I had come across this book before because it deals with a moment in time and place that I’m very interested in, which is 1945 Europe and Germany. It takes a perspective that I think has not been widely focused on, which is different aspects of everyday life in Germany in the immediate period after the war. For me, personally, it was a very eye-opening account. “These books are by writers who are at the top of their game” I think it’s a spectacularly important book because it raises universal themes. We’ve been reading in our papers over the last few days and weeks what it means when war comes to an end, at least temporarily—permanently, I hope—in parts of Ukraine. In towns and small villages, the Russian occupier has been removed and a degree of normal business resumes. You begin to see the consequences in terms of getting hold of food, transportation, collaborators, culture, kids going back to school, all these issues. A lot of my work as a lawyer is dealing with horrendous international cases and it’s the same everywhere—Rwanda, Yugoslavia, Chile—what happens when a degree of normality returns. This book shows that in a powerful way. I found it very affecting."
Marit Kapla & Peter Graves (translator) · Buy on Amazon
"It’s not! You have to read it very carefully. It deals with a tiny village in Sweden which has about 40 inhabitants left. The writer has basically interviewed all of them and, using those interviews, told the story of a particular place over time. So you get the minutiae of the life of a village, against the backdrop of the 20th and 21st century and changes that are taking place. It reads like poetry, but she’s simply taken the words of the local inhabitants and presented them in a different form. This book makes you work because it’s not immediately apparent what’s going on. Then you begin to work it out, who is speaking, when they’re speaking, what they’ve done in life, what their age is, what their role is. Get the weekly Five Books newsletter It’s a completely original insight into the life of a tiny place which, again, throws up universal themes. Once I got into it, it’s rather an exciting book to read, because it’s so original, but so resonant because it deals with our lives too. So much of it speaks to what anyone in any community goes through and observes: frustrations and anxieties and emotions and passions and loves and hates. It’s an amazing book. It wasn’t for me. I spend my life sitting in courtrooms listening to the minutiae of things, so I’m fascinated by those. I’m also fascinated by the act of telling them. What is so powerful about this book is that the manner of the telling of the stories is just so original, it’s so different from any other book I’ve come across. So yes, you’re in a single village in Sweden but that’s a lens into a bigger picture about the human condition."
James Poskett · Buy on Amazon
"Again, it challenges our assumptions. I grew up in Britain and went to school in the 1970s and was told that science basically started with Isaac Newton . It’s really nice to read an account of scientific endeavor which tells you that across cultures and places, things were going on that gave insight into the world. For example, there’s the astronomer, Ulugh Beg, who five centuries ago calculated the length of the solar year to within 25 seconds of accuracy to what we’ve got today. That single episode encapsulates what this book is about. It encourages us to stop imagining that we are somehow at the center of the universe of progress and development and to recognize that there are other cultures out there who have been way ahead of the game and who we’ve learned from. We’re not very good at articulating or recognizing that, but this book does, across a range of places and times. That’s a really important exercise to engage in. Again, the book is very accessible. Coming back to what I said earlier, I write in the field of law, trying to make that accessible. I really appreciate a scientist helping me to understand scientific developments in a way that absolutely resonates and unpeels the complexities of our world. It’s a very significant book. I take a pretty broad view of understanding world cultures. There’s the macro, which this scientific book does, or there’s the micro which the Osebol or the Alexander Graham Bell books do. It’s about being able to look at the world in a different way, that’s the common theme."
Alia Trabucco Zerán & Sophie Hughes (translator) · Buy on Amazon
"This was the other book that I had come across before because I’m doing a lot of work on Chile right now. I’m writing a book on Pinochet, so I’ve been reading a lot of Chilean literature. Again, it is wholly original. It’s the unpicking of four rather mundane but awful stories of acts of killing involving women. It’s taking the events of many decades ago and reviewing them with reference to a new set of understandings and the values of today. This book has a particular gendered aspect that is incredibly significant in explaining to us the circumstances in which, in Chile, society came down like a ton of bricks on individual women who, for one reason or another, found themselves in a situation in which they were involved in an act of killing. Once again, though, it’s universal. These stories felt pretty familiar to me, living in London, because these are the kinds of stories that would have taken place here. I suppose I was aware of these issues and what it’s like to be a woman in a particular society because I’d read a book many years ago by Helena Kennedy, Eve Was Framed . By revisiting these four stories, this book allows us to look at the values of those times and the values of our times and think long and hard about what has changed. It’s also sublimely written. This is a real writer. There are people who write and there are writers, and this is a writer. I’d put Osebol in that category also. That’s not dispositive, but it really is exciting to be in the hands of someone who is a professional wordsmith. The craft is different. You are in the hands of an individual with different qualities. It’s not just a story to be told, but the manner of the telling. Well, read the one about the maid who kills two of the children in her charge. It’s a really powerful book."
Jing Tsu · Buy on Amazon
"The joy of being a judge on this prize is you learn a lot. These books are by writers who are at the top of their game, really world-class thinkers. This book was fascinating. It was the first thing I’ve read that began to enable me to understand the art of Chinese writing. They don’t have an alphabet with twenty-something letters, but thousands of symbols or characters. She tells a rather gripping story. The book gets completely fascinating on how you transmit those characters in the age of, first, the typewriter, and then the digital age. How do you get these Chinese characters onto the internet? At the heart of it are matters of power and authority and persuasion and propaganda and communication. Interestingly, it is a mark of leadership for a Chinese leader to have penmanship. If we saw Liz Truss’s handwriting, there’d just be a big yawn, but in China it’s a mark of a person’s qualities and capacities for leadership. It’s a riveting tale and an insight into Chinese culture, which I personally want more of as China takes a stronger place in the world. I want to understand what makes that community or communities tick. She also focuses on the individuals, which is another theme connecting these books. The ones that really resonate for me are those which take not ideas, but individuals and the role they’ve played in taking things forward. She really does that. She doesn’t just tell you how it happened, she tells you who did it and their story. Yes, right up to the present day. Technically it’s complex, how you take these characters and create a language which is capable of being transmitted and understood by other people. It’s a form of standardization, I suppose, but it’s really interesting. Part of our best books of 2022 series."

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