
In one of her more recent publications in The Washington Post, "What Libya has inherited from Moammar Gadaffi", she discusses the lasting effects of Gadaffi's regime in Lybia. Although she is writing non-fiction she is able to pull the reader in with metaphors, with her use of rhetoric:
"Young men in fatigues hang around outside the offices of the Transitional National Council, carrying rifles and flashing V (for victory) signs at visitors. Inside, older men in leather jackets sit on sofas drinking tea, while temporary officials cope with clashing appointments and race up and down the hallways. It’s just how one imagines the Smolny Institute, Lenin’s St. Petersburg headquarters, in 1917: amateur, enthusiastic, disorganized, rumor-filled and slightly paranoid, all at once."The reader, in this case myself, feels the need to read on as if it were a novel, wanting to now what happens next.
In her website she discusses other topics that often have nothing to do with foreign policy, rather topics such as the social location, the reality that many Americans are living today. In one of her posts she questions, Can America Survive Without Its Backbone?. In this writing she begins with a personal story/experience belonging to one of her close friends. She focuses on the struggles of the middle class to remain "middle class". Applebaum hones in on the disparities that exist from one city to the next in our own country. She makes the point that in the US the city you are born in, the city you grow up in will definitely serve as an obstacle or an advantage when it becomes time to plan your future.
I look forward to reading more of Anne Applebaum's work. So far I have the impression that she is a well-rounded writer that is able to reach her audience very effectively.
She seems a good choice. I expect she's travelled in the regions on which she reports--that often helps both credibility and strong narrative writing.
ReplyDeleteSome of the text above can be used fairly directly in your essay.