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Aleksander Hemon: ‘I wrote it as I was angry’

The Bosnian-born novelist tells Annie Dare of the emotion that drove his latest work, The Lazarus Project

August 28, 2008 16:03

By

Annie Dare

2 min read

Aleksander Hemon was visiting Chicago when war broke out in 1992 in Sarajevo, his birthplace. He has lived almost uninterruptedly in the American city ever since. Now 44, he cites Rainer Maria Rilke's definition of art of worth coming "out of necessity".

History weighs too heavily on Hemon for him to sign up to either post-modernism's arbitrary rhetorical whimsy or the contemporary US craze for self-centred memoir. All the turbulence, violence and suffering he has seen, or ever tried to imagine, fuels his urgency to write.

"I have to talk about these things," he says. "As disappointed as I am in so many things, I cannot give up. I want it to matter to someone somewhere, some day, somehow."

With his third book, The Lazarus Project, Hemon weaves the parallel stories of two immigrants to Chicago: the real-life Russian-Jewish émigré, Lazarus Averbuch - who escaped the Kishinev pogrom only to be gunned down in 1908, aged 19, by the city's assistant chief of police - and a maudlin Bosnian writer, Vladimir Brik, who, in 2004, sets about researching the circumstances of Averbuch's death.

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