Book Jacket

 

rank 3361 (-160)
word count 11895
date submitted 10.09.2009
date updated 12.09.2009
genres: Fiction, Historical Fiction, Histor...
classification: universal
incomplete

I Am Pol Pot

Steve Otto

 

The making of Democratic Kampuchea
A fictional autobiography

 

This novel looks at Pol Pot’s revolution, which developed as a result of the 1970s turbulence of the Vietnam War. When President Richard Nixon spread the Vietnam War to Kampuchea, (called Cambodia today) he not only caused outrage and protest at home, including the Kent State Ohio massacres, but he also threw Kampuchea into a state of civil war. His inept handling of the situation brought about one of the strangest and cruel social experiment of the 20th Century. Pol Pot ruled through a committee known for the first year only as the Ankar (organization). His name was not even spoken to the Kampuchean people for two years. His Communist Party of Kampuchea had amassed a powerful movement of disenfranchised peasants, who were loyal to him and his regime. The Residence of Phnom Penh, the city’s capital, were not so lucky. They were treated with suspicion and punishment for those considered “un-redeemable” was harsh.
This novel looks at the Cambodian revolution from inside the ruling circle. It is a depiction of the man, his ideas and his motives. He saw himself as the world’s great redeemer, while most people outside his movement saw a horror show. This is his story.

 
 

tags

, 1970s indochina war, cambodian revolution, pol pot

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5 comments

 

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Jo Carroll wrote 143 days ago

This is a deeply uncomfortable book. I have been to Cambodia - and love it, and have such respect for the courage of its people. For me (and this is a personal issue) I find it difficult enough to think about what has happened to them, and cannot stomach an attempt to look at the other side - if you like, to justify it. That does not mean that this book should not be written - if we cannot begin to understand the minds of tyrants the world will never know how to prevent the mayhem they create.
From your perspective, it may be really difficult to find a publisher for this - for that very reason. I know the trails are ongoing in Cambodia (not that you would know it from the international press), but most would prefer to turn their gaze away from such atrocities. I applaud your efforts to write this - please forgive my weakness of stomach. Good luck, j
The Storm Drain

Andrew W. wrote 143 days ago

I Am Pol Pot

Hi Steve,

How ambitious and how important, makes much of the rest of the writing on this site seem frivolous by compare. What you describe so diligently and clinically is fascism. What an interesting approach to take, the similiarities with Nazism in Germany and how people responded are interesting, shining a light into some default positions in human nature as much as anything else, how many meals exactly are we away from revolution! A frightening book, scratch beneath the surface of the supposedly sophisticated ape and we discover the animal beneath, not too far from the surface at all.

Great history, best wishes and good luck - Andrew W.
(Sanctuary's Loss)

mikegilli wrote 148 days ago

Amazing book. Seems well reasearched and fascinating.
Is there a translation in Kampuchean?
Suggestion.
Though it´s a log you can put in scenes and dialogues, I
saw a bit. Maybe if you´re revising one day this would make
it more personal ane engaging.
What about Saddam? Or is he too recent.
All the best with htis, shelved. ...Mikey (The Free)

John Harold McCoy wrote 149 days ago

Hi, Steve. This is fascinating. I'm racking my brain trying to remember the novel I read about the Khmer Rouge set in, I believe it was, the late 70's. I just looked at my book shelves but I didn't see it. 'I Am Pol Pot' gives me background that the novel didn't provide. I read the first 3 chapter of what you have here (and scanned the rest for content). I'm tired now but I'll be back to read the rest. I'm really interested in this, and your presentation of the story, MC and the history of the communist party is excellent. On my shelf for sure. I see you have about 12k words uploaded. Please message me when (if) you upload more.

C.P. wrote 151 days ago

Welome to anthonomy. Hope you like it here. I put you on my wall to start you off. Your book showcases the worst in humanity. And what is worse how many of us stood by and did nothing? Gives on reason to think. Good luck. C.P

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