"Perhaps
Orizio discovered that these demons are beyond
de-demonising, for rarely does he successfully
narrow the gap between "us" and "them.
Instead -- from the title onwards -- this is a
book of horrified gawping, albeit elegantly written
horrified gawping. (...) When I picked this book
up to re-read it, I found that I didn't want to.
All that monstrousness was just wearying."
Jon
Ronson, Daily Telegraph
"Talk
of the Devil is first a book of working journalism;
the best
story here is Orizio's own. His pursuit of clues
and clandestine appointments with shadowy figures
is at least as interesting as what the former
tyrants have to say, sometimes more so. (...) The
result
is fascinating as a resource but curiously lightweight,
despite the colourful cast of historical figures."
Jad
Adams, The Guardian
"By
removing its subjects from any wider historical/international
context,
Talk of the Devil leaves the impression that
the personalities and foibles of these tinpot tyrants
can explain events."
Mick Hume, New Statesman
"Orizio
had the interesting idea of tracking down
all the disgraced former dictators he could find
and interviewing
them. The result is by turns eerily comical,
horrifying, ridiculous, depressing and just plain
strange."
Andrea Behr, San Francisco Chronicle
"Insofar
as any abstract point emerges from this
book of the kind that might interest a political
scientist,
it is the banality of power and it holders.
(...) One reads this book with a slightly shamefaced
absorption."
Anthony Daniels, The
Spectator
"And
so what Orizio's book really illustrates
is the banality of denial. (...) But the heart
of the
matter remains the evil these men first
committed and then denied; and on that subject,
the heart
of darkness of most of these stories,
this elegant and entertaining book has little light
to shed."
Noel Malcolm, Sunday Telegraph
"But
a question less frequently posed, and more suggested
by this
slight but enjoyable book is why, for
people lucky enough not to live under dictatorships,
are dictators
almost pornographically fascinating
? In form and style, Orizio's artfully constructed
chapters resemble
nothing so much as the celebrity profile."
Adam
Hochschild, Times Literary Supplement
"This
might be darkly interesting, but
Orizio's actual "encounters" are
often brief and padded out by lengthy
how-I-managed-to-get-to-the-dictator preambles.
(...) Tracking fallen tyrants down to
the remote locations where they see
out their lives, he finds himself only joining
the ranks of those
to whom these men and women have
dictated."
Chandrahas Choudhury, The Washington
Post
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