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From the archives

Pitch Perfect?

On the promise and perils of global soccer

How Graphic Are These Novels?

Banned books deserve reviews too

The Canadian Conversation

A Polish journalist’s perspective on residential schools

The Dove Is Never Free

Relief agencies struggle with confused focus and political co-optation

Ian Smillie

Cambodia Calling: A Memoir from the Frontlines of Humanitarian Aid

Richard Heinzl

John Wiley and Sons

272 pages, hardcover

ISBN: 9780470153253

An Imperfect Offering: Humanitarian Action in the Twenty-First Century

James Orbinski

Doubleday Canada

431 pages, hardcover

ISBN: 9780385660693

Many books have been written in recent years about the humanitarian aid system and its failings, but there are not many good personal memoirs of front-line international emergency work. One of the most striking, for its title at least, is Emergency Sex (and Other Desperate Measures): A True Story from Hell on Earth, written by three United Nations workers whose paths crossed over a dozen years in Cambodia, Somalia, Haiti and Bosnia. In the end, however, Emergency Sex and others like it tend to be rather self-absorbed: a lot of running for cover, desperate refugee camps, occasional bouts of heavy drinking and struggles against unreasonable orders from bureaucrats in far-off headquarters — like M.A.S.H. for the new millennium.

Richard Heinzl’s Cambodia Calling: A Memoir from the Frontlines of Humanitarian Aid is a bit like this, although it lacks...

Ian Smillie wrote Under Development: A Journey Without Maps. He lives in Ottawa.

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