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Review
A Guardian (UK) Best History Book of the YearA Times (UK) Best History Book of the YearA Sunday Times (UK) Best Biography of the Year"Riveting."New York TimesTim Butcher does a superb job of filling in [a] large and fascinating gap, with a book that is part travelogue, part biography, part history and part journalism, as well as an absorbing exploration of the way the overlooked past colours the present. Highly readable but profoundly researched, The Trigger represents a bold exception to the deluge of First World War books devoted to mud, blood and poetry.”Ben Macintyre, Times (UK), Best History Books of the Year”A triumph of punctilious scholarship and research. . . . Butcher has written a marvelously absorbing book on the nature of one man’s political grievance and its terrible aftermath.”Guardian (UK), Best History Books of 2014”Butcher, who covered the 1990s Balkans conflict for the Daily Telegraph, returns to Bosnia and Herzegovina to literally retrace the steps of young Gavrilo Princip. . . . Along the way, Butcher renders the countryside and cityscapesand the people who inhabit themin fine detail, while also moving back and forth in time, taking in the Ottoman rule, the political climate of the early 1900s, the recent Bosnian war, and the landscape as it looks today. Top-notch reporting by a journalist who knows the lay of the land.”Booklist (starred review)Engrossing. . . . A fascinating history of a complex region rife with ethnic rivalries and a vivid travelogue of a dangerous journey across a landscape marked by the minefields and devastation of the fighting of the 1990s. . . . A haunting and illuminating book.”Kirkus Reviews (starred review)Journeying to Princip’s birthplace, and finding new documents about his school life, Butcher follows his subject across the Balkans in a sometimes haunting book that is as much about the present as the past.”Sunday Times (UK), Best Biographies of the Year”No one has got closer into the mind of one of the key figures of the last century, Gavrilo Princip, than the journalist-turned-investigative-historian Timothy Butcher. Part travelogue, part history of the Balkans, part psychological insight into the motivation of History’s most famous terrorist before Osama bin Laden, this book brings an objective eye and flowing prose style to the story of what happened in Sarajevo on that June day a hundred years ago. He makes complex political and ethnic rivalries easy to comprehend, and gets to the heart of the issues, largely thanks to his personal knowledge of the region. Nor does the sheer poignancy of the tale escape his occasionally coruscating ire. This is first class history and in a year swamped with First World War centenary books, it’s the one you should read first.”Andrew Roberts, author of The Storm of War: A New History of the Second World WarTim Butcher, one of the bravest and kindest foreign journalists who saw the Bosnian war, has written a splendid book, part-memoir, part history, of that country, ingeniously using the assassin of 1914 as an anti-hero. It takes its place among classics of Balkan history.”Norman Stone, author of World War One: A Short History and The Eastern Front 1914-1917A fascinating study of one of those rare individuals whose act of violence changed the history of the world. An incisive, shrewd, wholly compelling investigation of an assassin's life and times.”William Boyd, author of A Good Man in Africa, The Ice Cream War, and Any Human HeartTim Butcher has re-written history with this evocative and moving journey in the footsteps of the assassin who sparked the First World War. Instead of a naive and misguided Serbian nationalist, he reveals an intelligent and determined South Slav patriot who gave his life for the cause. The Serbian state should not have been held to account. A superb and important book.”Saul David, author of Military Blunders: The How and Why of Military Failure and The Illustrated Encyclopedia of WarfareA significant contribution to the growing body of literature on the outbreak of WWI. . . . In the 1990s, Butcher covered Yugoslavia’s collapse into mutual genocide, and his evocative interfacing of his experiences with Princip’s is a highlight of the book.”Publishers WeeklyTake a measure of well-researched history, add indelible personal recollections of the Bosnian war, season with piquant vignettes of traversing rural Bosnia on foot and mix with a light touch. The result is consistently appetizing and occasionally controversial. Tim Butcher goes from strength to strength. I enjoyed every paragraph.”Dervla Murphy, author of Full Tilt: Ireland to India With a Bicycle and Through the Embers of Chaos: Balkan JourneysRarely, if ever, can such momentous and tragic events have been sparked by such an unlikely and undistinguished a man, Gavrilo Princip. This insightful, useful and delightfully written book shines a unique spotlight on the trigger to the First World War, placing the assassin and his homeland in the wider strategic context. A great bookone to be recommended to professional and amateur historian alike.”General Sir David Richards, Former Chief of the British Defence StaffA compelling and fascinating read. . . . A shadowy assassin brought to life by a writer who gets to grips with a century of Balkan intrigue.”Kate Adie, veteran journalist and former Chief News Correspondent for BBC News"In this book, a masterpiece of historical empathy and evocation, Tim Butcher goes in search of the person behind the myths. . . . A tour de force."Guardian (UK)A superb account. . . . A hybrid of travel and history, The Trigger gets inside the mind of the assassin and seeks to understand Balkan geopolitics on the eve of the first world war and after. . . . A triumph of research, it will appeal to the layman and historian alike.”Financial Times (UK)The most original of First World War centenary books. . . . A travel narrative of rare resonance and insight.”Sunday Times (UK)The finest contribution so far this year to the rapidly expanding literature on the Great War.”Herald ScotlandThe most imaginative and singular book on the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War.”Evening Standard (UK)Extremely well written, taut and evocative. . . . Despite its complex subject, Butcher makes this an easy and engaging read with his breezy style and fascinating encounters. . . . Until now, Princip’s history has been largely obscure to an English-speaking audience. Thanks to Butcher’s timely book, this should now change.”Daily Telegraph (UK)A page-turning exploration of how the forgotten past continues to inform the present.”Independent on Sunday (UK)Utterly absorbing. . . . If journalism is the first draft of history, Butcher marries both disciplines with boldness and originality.”BBC History Magazine (UK)Evocative and ingenious. . . . A well-crafted mix of personal encounters, vivid descriptions and incisive musings on the landscape and its bloody history.”Literary Review (UK)
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About the Author
Tim Butcher worked for the Daily Telegraph from 1990 to 2009 as chief war correspondent, Africa bureau chief, and Middle East correspondent. His first book, Blood River, was a number-one bestseller in the UK and was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize. He lives in Cape Town.
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Product details
Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: Grove Press; First Trade Paper edition (June 9, 2015)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9780802123893
ISBN-13: 978-0802123893
ASIN: 0802123899
Product Dimensions:
5.4 x 1.2 x 8.2 inches
Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
4.1 out of 5 stars
58 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#834,641 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
This is a strange book. It is well written, reasonably well researched and interesting.What it is not is about Gavrilo Princip and even less about the murder he committed.Well, to be more precise it is marginally about both: they are the pretext for the book to be written, but neither is the real subject of the book.The book is a curious mix of travel book, war memories of a correspondent in the Bosnia war, very much a "walk-in-the-woods-and-meet-the-local-peasantry" book and an interesting description of Bosniacs, some Serbians too, and a glanced over history of events that led to the assassination.Yet the description of the events surrounding it and the actual murder have all the excitement of a cold pizza to borrow a sentence I came across' once and loved.Not to recommend the book, would be unfair. The writer's experiences and knowledge of the environment, both anthropological and historical, deserve a read.But the main subject and, above all, the title is a great disappointment.
I wasn’t especially interested in the subject matter of this book to begin with; I read it because I had been impressed by one of Tim Butcher’s earlier books, Blood River, an exciting and well-written account of a long and dangerous journey through Central Africa. Like Blood River, The Trigger is a mixture of history, travelogue and journalism – a format Butcher does very well. It is just as good as Blood River, and I ended up being very interested in its subject indeed.The outline of the book is thus: In the early 1990s Butcher is a young correspondent in the Balkans, covering the conflict for Britain’s Telegraph newspaper. In Sarajevo he finds people using a small building as a toilet, and is bemused to find that it is the mausoleum of Gavrilo Princip, whose assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand in the city led to the First World War. Butcher moves on but does not forget this odd sight, and in 2012 he resolves to walk across Bosnia and Serbia in Princip’s footsteps. Butcher wants to see if the journey to see if doing so would illuminate the chain of events that had led not only to that war but to the one he covered 80 years later.In 1907 the 13-year-old Princip walked most of the way from his home in Western Bosnia to Sarajevo to get an education. Later, as a radicalised, political young adult, he went to Serbia and there hatched the plot to kill the Archduke; then, armed, he walked back. It is these journeys Butcher wants to recreate. He starts by enlisting Arnie, his former fixer from Bosnia, as a companion. Arnie, a Bosnian Muslim, is now living in London but, after some thought, he agrees. Meanwhile Butcher tries to track down Princip’s birthplace, Obljaj. This is hard, as it is an obscure hamlet deep in what Bosnians call the vukojebina (literally, “where the wolves f**kâ€). He eventually finds it on an old map in the bowels of the Royal Geographical Society. He and Arnie make for Obljaj.It’s when they get there that this narrative, a little slow to start, really takes off. The Princip home is a ruin but, quite unexpectedly, they find the Princip clan still living next door. No-one can remember Gavrilo, who died in 1918. But at least one man remembers his parents in their old age, and the folk-memories of Princip are strong. The next day Butcher and Arnie start a long walk to Sarajevo. The memories of the Princips, and Butcher’s own diligent research in Sarajevo, uncover a great deal new about the assassin. His killing of the Archduke is part of history but the man himself, locked up at 19, dead at 23, has always been a footnote. Butcher brings him very alive. He also conjures up a vivid picture of Sarajevo as Princip would have found it in 1907, and it reminds me very much of Aleppo, where I lived for several years in the 1990s.Moreover Butcher finds that Princip’s story does provide keys to the region’s history, and to the conflict of the 1990s. One or two themes emerge strongly from the book. In Butcher’s view, Austria-Hungary, which had only occupied Bosnia in 1878, was a colonial power there, extracting resources – chiefly timber – and giving a little back, but not much. Princip’s fanaticism was rooted in a hatred of what he saw as an oppressive colonial regime that has kept his people miserably poor. (He was himself the seventh of nine children; the previous six had all died in infancy.) Moreover the people Princip saw as his were all the South Slavs, not just Serbs. He was not a Serbian nationalist as such (and in Butcher’s view, Serbia did not support the assassination). Princip was an anti-colonial freedom fighter.But perhaps the most interesting perspective in this book is Arnie’s. At the time people outside Yugoslavia blamed the 1990s war on ancient primitive hatreds, rather as they spoke of Northern Ireland when I was growing up, and see Syria now. Arnie doesn’t buy it. “Those people who said, ‘These people have always hated each other’ were just being lazy,†he tells Butcher. “In my own life I saw people from different communities work together, live together, get married even. There was nothing inevitable about what happened in the 1990s. It was just that a few – the extremists, the elite, the greedy – saw nationalism as a way to grab what they wanted.â€Like Blood River, this is a thoughtful, well-written book, an absorbing read but also full of insights. Butcher’s knack of combining several roles – the historian, the travel writer and the journalist – serves him well. I look forward to seeing where he does it next. Meanwhile The Trigger is excellent, and could well be my non-fiction read of the year.
A century ago a non-descript teenager pulled a gun out of his pocket, stepped out of a crowd, and fired two shots into an automobile, killing a man and his wife. He was quickly arrested and put on trial, found guilty and sentenced to twenty years imprisonment (at 19 he was slightly too young to receive the death penalty), and then died himself less than four years later from tuberculosis contracted in prison. A non-entity unworthy of further attention? No, because that teenager's name was Gavrilo Princip and the people he killed in Sarajevo on June 28, 1914 were Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie, and the course of the twentieth century was irreversibly altered by his act. Those shots led to World War I breaking out a month later, to revolutions in Russia and other countries, to the rise of Communism and Fascism and then World War II, the Cold War, countless other hot wars, and eventually to the chaotic world we inhabit in 2014.Tim Butcher is the ideal chronicler of this search to learn more about Gavrilo Princip, because he was heavily involved in one of the recent after-effects of Princip's shots: he was an embedded reporter during the fighting that followed the breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s, when Serbs, Croats, and Muslims struggled for conquest and survival in Bosnia, Princip's home territory. Thus this book is really three parallel journeys: Princip's own life story being one, then the tortured history of Bosnia as the second, and then finally Butcher's own memories of the terrible things he saw in the 1990s and his revisitation of them over twenty years later as the third.Of the three Princip's own is the briefest, since his life was both short and obscure for the greater part of it. Butcher did an incredible job of tracking down living relations, old homes, the few photos ever taken of him, and even ancient school reports for Princip. Butcher followed Princip's literal trail, travelling the same roads and paths the future assassin took as he left his home village for Sarajevo, then Belgrade, and then back to Sarajevo for that fatal rendezvous with the Archduke. Princip's trail led through areas which Butcher already knew well from his experience covering the war, and at times the book almost becomes a macabre travelogue in which we are led from minefields to massacre sites to bombing ruins. On a more positive note, we also learn a lot about human resilience, because nearly everywhere Butcher went in pursuit of Princip we see rebuilt churches and mosques, reviving towns and cities, and a populace still scarred by conflict but determined to survive and prosper.Peopling the pages of The Trigger are many colorful characters, including not just Princip and his fellow assassins like Trifko Grabez, Nedjelko Cabrinovic, Danilo Ilic, and Mehmet Mehmetbasic (plus a few others here and there) but also of the extraordinary people of today's Bosnia, many of whom,such as Mile and Arnie, went to great trouble and some peril to assist Butcher on his quest. This is also a story of many foreigners, including Franz Ferdinand and Sophie as well as the colorful diplomat/spy Sir Fitzroy Maclean, whose activities affected Bosnia.I thoroughly enjoyed The Trigger and came away from it with a deeper understanding not just of the events of June 28, 1914 but also of many other dark times in the torturous tale of twentieth century Bosnia.
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