IVANA BODROIĆ was born in Vukovar, Croatia, in 1982 where she lived until the Yugoslav wars started in 1991. That year her father disappeared while fighting for Croatian independence and she and the rest of her family moved to Kumrovec, where they stayed at a hotel for displaced persons. In 2005, she published her first poetry collection, The First Step into Darkness. The Hotel Tito, her first novel,was published in 2010, receiving high praise from both critics and audiences and becoming a Croatian bestseller. She has since published a second poetry collection, A Crossing for Wild Animals,and a short story collection,100% Cotton. Her political thriller, The Pit, will be published by Seven Stories in 2019. ELLEN ELIAS-BURSAĆ is a translator of fiction and nonfiction from Bosnian, Croatian, and Serbian.She has taught in the Harvard University Slavic Department and is a contributing editor to the online journal Asymptote. She lives in Boston.
Wonderful, touching, and terrifying writing. --Sebastian Barry Bodro ic has a knack for noticing. Seamlessly, she taps into the perceptiveness of the child's-eye-view and casts it on the page in crystalline form. To shape these minute details into a smooth and compelling read is a testament to Bodro ic's talent, a facility mirrored by the capable hands of Elias-Bursac. --Sara Novic, author of Girl at War When something important happens in the literary arena, when a really great book is written, it is well worth pausing for a moment to celebrate it and contemplate the arrival of a magnificent new talent. --Miljenko Jergovic, author of Sarajevo Marlboro, named one of the 25 books that inspired the world by World Literature Today, winner of the Erich Maria Remarque Peace Prize The story of a child's survival in inconceivable circumstances. This novel touched me to the core. --Janne Teller, author of Nothing, a Printz and Batchelder Honor Book Ivana Bodro ic's Hotel Tito is powerful tale of human resilience. Dripping with authenticity. Heartbreaking, horrific, but ultimately redemptive. An instant classic. Not just an anti-war novel but a human novel. Wonderful writing and personal insight make Hotel Tito a unique kind masterpiece. A must-read testimony to the human spirit. --Eoin Colfer, bestselling author of the Artemis Fowl series Powerful and moving. --Jim Sheridan, acclaimed director of My Left Foot and In America Drawing on personal experience, Bodro ic is remarkably adept at blending a coming-of-age story about a girl who both knows and doesn't know what's happening with a starkly, almost matter-of-factly delivered picture of suffering we should not forget. --Library Journal, Ten Top Titles for Winter Reading A young girl is caught in the turmoil of adolescence and war.Drawing on her own family's experiences during Yugoslavia's struggle for independence in the 1990s, poet and fiction writer Bodro ic'(The Hole, 2016, etc.) creates a captivating tale that earned acclaim and literary awards when it was published in Europe. Translated by Elias-Bursa?, the story begins when the slyly observant narrator is 9 and suddenly is sent, with her older brother, from their home in Vukovar, on the Croatian-Serbian border, to the seashore. Although her parents do not explain why, she has a sneaking feeling it has to do with politics because everybody talks about politics all the time. A few weeks later, the children's mother arrives, but their father remains in Vukovar to defend Croatia against the Serbs, a long siege that ends in the imprisonment--and, the family later learns, the murder--of 400 men, her father among them. The remaining family members become refugees, housed in one shabby room at the former Political School in Kumrovec, which they sardonically dub the Hotel Tito, after longtime Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito, a native of that city. Living on a meager displaced family's allowance, they find a community consisting only of other refugees. Repeatedly, they petition the government for an apartment. Believe me, the mother writes, it is much harder for the families of the missing because there are things we can never accept, and the uncertainty is crushing us. Equally crushing is widespread disdain toward refugees. Against the backdrop of political news and rumors, the narrator grows up, setting aside Barbie dolls for disco clubs, dealing with jealousy, hurt feelings, her brother's volatile anger, her mother's depression, and her own mysterious emotions. How cool it was to be all melancholy and sighs, she reflects. Desperate to leave the Hotel Tito, she is elated when her excellent grades make her eligible for a fine secondary school in the capital city of Zagreb. In the new setting, though beset by grief and fear, she is buoyed by hope.Tragic history conveyed with honesty and candor. --Kirkus Reviews