Author:Confucius,Arthur Waley,Sarah Allan
Confucius is one of the most humane, rational, and lucid of moral teachers, concerned not with arcane metaphysics, but with practical issues of life and conduct.
What is virtue?
What sort of life is most conducive to happiness?
How should the state be ruled?
What is the proper relationship between human beings and their environment?
In this classic translation by Arthur Waley, the questions Confucius addressed two and a half millennia ago remain as relevant as ever.
This is the most honest account I have read of what it feels like to be a war photographer and what drives such brave, some would say reckless, individuals to risk their lives.
—— Daily MailA splendid book, devastating in what it reveals
—— Archbishop Desmond TutuWhat distinguishes this account is its honesty-. A gripping book where emotions are laid bare- [Marinovich and Silva] confront the basic ethical and moral issues which most of us rarely have to think about as we glide along in our conformable Western lives.
—— Yorkshire Posta compelling account of what it is like to be a war correspondent in one's own country... [a] superbly told story
—— Independent on Sundaya device of searing pain- as painful a loss of innocence as any I have read anywhere- powerful and heartbreaking- Not for the faint-hearted, and not for the beach, The Bang-Bang Club is a must, though.
—— The TimesThis is a book of extraordinary power. I cannot recommend it highly enough
—— Fergal Keane