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2013 book by Åsne Seierstad From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
One of Us: The Story of a Massacre in Norway — and Its Aftermath is a non-fiction book by Norwegian journalist Åsne Seierstad. It was adapted into the 2018 American film 22 July by English writer and director Paul Greengrass.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2017) |
Author | Åsne Seierstad |
---|---|
Original title | En av oss: en fortelling om Norge |
Translator | Sarah Death |
Language | English (Translated) |
Genre | Non-fiction |
Publisher | Kagge |
Publication date | November 2013 (Norwegian Edition) |
Publication place | Norway |
Published in English | 5 March 2015 (UK Edition) |
Pages | 544pp (HC Translation) |
ISBN | 9781844089192 (Virago Edition) |
Preceded by | Angel of Grozny: Inside Chechnya |
Followed by | Two Sisters (2016) |
Originally published in Norwegian by Kagge |
One of Us tells the lifestories of several Norwegians – notably 18-year-olds Bano Rashid, Simon Sæbø, and Viljar Hanssen – leading up to the 22 July 2011 attacks by Anders Breivik, when he terrorized both Oslo's Regjeringskvartalet and a summer camp associated with the Norwegian Labour Party.
Seierstad explains in the epilogue[1]: 514 that journalist Tina Brown commissioned her to get anything on "that man" for publication in Newsweek. Instead she wrote about the reaction in Norway,[2] then left for Libya. When Breivik's trial was set to begin, Brown tried again. Seierstad returned to Norway and sat in the courtroom for all 10 weeks of the trial. In Seierstad's words[1]: 515 she was "drip-fed the details of the planning and execution of the act of terrorism... these were drops of stories... that were tailored for the purpose of the trial." She wanted to know what really happened (the stream of events not just the drops) so she embarked on the project that became One of Us. She read the police reports, the confidential psychiatric reports, the 22 July commission report, and Breivik's own writing. She interviewed families, friends, and politicians. In her author's note[1]: vii Seierstad reports that all facts told in the narrative come from these sources.
Seierstad writes about the origins of the title in the epilogue.
One of Us is a book about belonging, a book about community... geographically, politically, and with families. Bano's... greatest aspiration was to be become one of us. There were no shortcuts. This is also a book about looking for a way to belong and not finding it. The perpetrator ultimately opted-out of the community and chose to strike at it in the most brutal of ways... It is also a story about contemporary Norway. It is a story about us.[1]: 523
One of Us was published in Norway in November 2013 by Kagge[1]: frontmatter (532pp). The subtitle – en fortelling om Norge ('A Tale of Norway')[3] – was expanded for the English market when Sarah Death translated Seierstad for English publication in 2015. The Hachette Book Group published One of Us: The Story of Anders Breivik and the Massacre in Norway in the UK under its Virago Imprint in March 2015.[1]: frontmatter Publishing rights for the Canadian and American markets were purchased – followed by an April 2015 release – by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (FSG).[1]: frontmatter Hachette retained the rights for Australia where the UK edition is sold.[4] Rights in New Zealand are 'open' so both US and UK editions are sold side-by-side.[5] Death's translation was used in all English-language markets concurrently.
The English-language version of One of Us has been recognized by a number of institutions and publications.
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