More of a character study than a war investigation. Sacco almost relaxes into this microcosm as relief from the bigger picture he was faced with portraying in Safe Area Gorazde. Also, it further punctures, as so much of Sacco's work does, the idea of journalistic objectivity, and the story itself becomes about the people who bring you 'the story'. On one hand there's Joe, who looks like a bumbling and naive American reporter, and on the other hand there's Neven, a Bosnian ex-soldier who helps reporters get to where the action is, a 'fixer'. The book is so unsettling because it is so intimate, the story focuses almost entirely on Joe and Neven as the only characters, with the political recent history given more for context of why these two people are in this place, and what different motivations are keeping them there. At times, it is very close to the bone and difficult to read, in places it is actually funny. At its heart though is the complex unwinding of the black and white ideas both people held going into the situation and how they increasingly see so much more division, ambiguity, and shades of grey.
Neven defends Sarajevo because he identifies as Sarajevan, although an ethnic Serb. He believes in what the city preserved before the war, a multi-ethnic, multi-religious, cultured urban Bosnia. Joe's experience of visiting Gorazde also meant his experiences were of the brutality of the Serb-led forces against those who identified as Bosnian. Yet as Neven tells of his experiences, and Joe gives the context of the wider actions of the supposed defending forces of Sarajevo, a picture emerges of ethnic, religious, regional, political and moral divisions that make up a much more complicated mosaic that you might expect. For example, Joe's wider history talks about the war crimes committed by Sarajevo defence forces against the ethnic Serbs who stayed in Sarajevo. But the more cutting and intimate reality comes from Neven, who has his commander tell him, that despite his voluntary military service, his bravery, sacrifice and the fact he is wounded in the line of duty, that he is still not trusted because he is ethnically Serb. In fact he tells Neven that he wants to discharge him because, whenever Neven is sent out on a mission, he 'costs' him two other men – one to shoot Neven if he should defect to the Serbian side, and one to watch Neven's back in case anyone in his own forces tried to shoot him simply for being an ethnic Serb. It is an incredible betrayal.
The friendship between Joe and Neven also starts out from a point of naivety, and grows into something more complicated. At first the relationship is defined by Joe's sense of bewilderment in Bosnia and reliance on his fixer to protect and guide him. He pays large quantities of money for this service. Neven is a larger-than-life figure with much bluster and bravado about his exploits during the war. But as the story progresses, the genuine friendship that develops between the two comes to influence this working relationship, so that Joe becomes slightly more cynical about Neven's stories and less willing to part with his cash. For Neven's part, his hard man exterior falters in places, and he reveals his doubts and uncertainties about his actions during the war, and his sense of fear for the future. He is the one who begins to look lost in the new Bosnia.
The end of the book finds them as two old friends, more comfortable than before but also more realistic about who the other person actually is, and it finds Sarajevo in a complicated peace. Neven is less blustering, willing to admit that his health and conscience have suffered because of the war, but hopeful. He tells a story about going through a court case to claim his inheritance and losing despite overwhelming evidence. He admits that his Serb ethnicity might be the reason he was denied his claim, but he refuses to believe it “because if it had something to do with me being Serb, what the hell was I fighting for?” The book ends, not on an image of Bosnia, or Joe and Neven, with all the corners filed off, not prettified, but an image that is complicated, complex, but nonetheless hopeful. A really good read.