"Civil wars strike deepest of all into the manners of the people. They vitiate politics. they corrupt morals; they pervert even the natural taste and relish of equity and justice."
You know its going to be great when an Edmund Burke quote is used to introduce a novel, and now that great writer of moral outrage Seymour gets stuck into the Yugoslavian racial war. Always love how Seymour writes the thriller based on the "real" major issues lesser writers could not begin to do justice to, and stay well away from, be it the 'ndrangeta, Marseilles slums, Kurdistan badlands, Northern Ireland and of course this, the worst European conflict since WWII. If it has happened, Seymour covers it in his works, as the former reporter he is.
Written before the UN started messing things up by taking sides, this covers the true horror and mess of ethnic fighting, before Srebrineca, but covering the same topics, of genocidal vengeance. Heartbreaking as always.
Has the classic Seymour motifs, that the on the surface "boring, unremarkable" types are those that are capable of unthinkable heroism, that true heroism is often based on stubbornness and moral anger. But now with the added thrill that parents often do not know their children best, or how they really are outside the family bubble. And it is brilliant.