Maps
The Balkans, 1990
The Balkans, 2003
Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1998
The Drina Valley, 1998
Abbreviations
Introduction
Part One: Children in Wartime
1. Fighting Begins
2. The War Goes On
3. Adjusting to Peace
Part Two: Understanding What Happened
4. Why Did We Fight?
5. What Became of Our Neighbors?
6. What Country Is This?
7. Where Do They Come From?
Part Three: Psychosocial Consequences
8. War and Well-being
9. Day after Day
10. Making Sense of Madness
11. Crimes and Punishments
Co-op available
Significant galley printing. ARCs distributed at Book Expo America
and the ALA annual conference.
National print, public radio, and online campaigns targeting
feature coverage from national and regional public radio outlets;
reviews and author profiles in major newspapers, women’s and
parenting magazines, and politics and foreign affairs magazines;
and coverage in major online news magazines
Special outreach and promotion through human rights groups in
connection with Universal Children’s Day (November 20) and Human
Rights Day (December 10)
Reading group guide development and book club outreach
Academic marketing plans include the development and distribution
of a teacher’s guide, Consortium subject catalog and Required
Reading newsletter advertising, FYE outreach, and promotion at
academic conferences
Simultaneous eBook publication and promotion
Author tour may expand based on the author’s travel schedule and
availability. She is often asked to be a featured speaker at
conferences in the U.S.
Possible serial excerpt or special profile in O, The Oprah
Magazine
Possible promotion through the History and BOMC2 book clubs
Giveaways through Goodreads and Library Thing
Promotion through BLP’s social media networks and website:
www.blpress.org
Blurbs solicited from Ishmael Beah, Verlyn Klinkenborg, Tony
Award-winning director John Tiffany, film actress Sienna Miller,
Emma Daly of Human Rights Watch, and Deborah Sontag of the New York
Times
Marketing and publicity efforts supported by Molly Mikolowski of A
Literary Light
Lynne Jones is a child psychiatrist, relief worker,
anthropologist, and author of Then They Started Shooting: Children
of the Bosnian War and the Adults They've Become. She was appointed
an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for her work in child
psychiatry in conflict-affected areas of Central Europe and has
established and directed mental health programs in areas of
conflict and natural disaster throughout Latin America, the
Balkans, East and West Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia.
Her field diaries have been published in O, The Oprah Magazine and
London Review of Books, and her audio diaries have been broadcast
on the BBC World Service.
A Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study Fellow, visiting scientist
at the FXB Center for Health and Human Rights at Harvard
University, research associate in the Developmental Psychiatry
Section at the University of Cambridge, and honorary consultant at
the Maudsley Hospital in London, Jones was also a senior mental
health advisor for the International Medical Corps for seven years
and is currently the Early Child Development Adviser for the Aga
Khan Foundation in northern Mozambique.
"Beautifully illustrates the way in which people (in this case children) actively engage with the experience of war ... Highly original." --Times Literary Supplement "Out of the horror of human cruelty in the Bosnian war comes a bright note." --Foreign Affairs "Careful, sensitive ... a deeply intimate look into the emotional makeup of children of war." --Kirkus Reviews "Thought-provoking and readable." --Library Journal "Psychiatrist Lynne Jones, working in Bosnia's Gorazde in 1996, discovered a striking puzzle: most children exposed to the extreme trauma of bombing, rape, or 'ethnic cleansing' were emotional, but not 'mentally ill.' Written with an engaging style by a caring doctor with unique experience in setting up clinics in conflict zones, Jones describes children in this Muslim town, detailing how their interpretation of trauma protected them or rendered them vulnerable. Careful to be balanced, she also listened to the Serbian children in the neighboring town, and revisited these children on both sides of the conflict years later. This remarkable book not only contributes to social history--including our understanding of the genocide in Srebrenica--but also to psychiatry. Her astonishing work challenges the medical model in understanding human responses to cruelty." --SIMON BARON-COHEN, Professor of Developmental Psychopathology, Cambridge University, and author of The Science of Evil: On Empathy and the Origins of Cruelty "Profound ... Rarely do we get the opportunity to delve into the thoughts of the young caught up in such a tragedy--and meet them not just once in their lives but again years later. This is a moving, well written and above all, deeply disturbing book." --TIM JUDAH, Europe correspondent for Bloomberg World View, Balkans correspondent for The Economist, and author of The Serbs: History, Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia "Part narrative, part analysis, part thoughtful reflection, this book belongs among the classic accounts of children and war." --JENNIFER LEANING, M.D., S.M.H., Harvard School of Public Health "Lynne Jones brings to the extreme situation she describes a truly unique combination of hands-on communally oriented psychiatric help; sensitive research on the impact of war and upheaval on children; and an astute sense of the interplay of political policies and psychological behavior... The book not only deepens our understanding of what happened in the former Yugoslavia but contributes greatly to our more general grasp of the consequences of death, loss, and dislocation, and the stubborn human persistence in the face of them." --ROBERT JAY LIFTON, author of The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide and Witness to an Extreme Century "One of the most illuminating books to have emerged out of the embers of the Bosnian war. Few outsiders have acquired such an inside knowledge of the thoughts and feelings of ordinary Bosnians, on both sides of the wartime divide." --NOEL MALCOLM, author of Bosnia: A Short History and Chairman of the Bosnian Institute in London "Then They Started Shooting upends the traditional discourse on the victims of war by continuing the narrative long after the violence has ended. The stories in this book are eloquently and poignantly recounted, and offer a vital, complex portrait of what the long road to peace looks like." --DINAW MENGESTU, author of The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears and How to Read the Air "Human rights investigations tend to produce snapshots at the moment of abuse. Rarely do we have occasion to look at the aftermath. Lynne Jones adds the dimension of time. With remarkable insight and sensitivity, she follows a group of young Bosnians from both sides of the Serb-Muslim conflict as they grow up. We see how they try to cope with, comprehend, and transcend the horrors that their elders have visited upon their communities. Their successes and failures deepen our understanding of human resilience and how people rebuild their lives from tragic circumstances." --KENNETH ROTH, Executive Director, Human Rights Watch "Lynne Jones is an internationally-known expert on the effects of war on children. Her description of the legacy of the savage war in Bosnia is a shattering but necessary read... This book should be in the knapsack of every international administrator." --BRENDAN SIMMS, author of Europe: The Struggle for Supremacy
Ask a Question About this Product More... |