We continue our special Governor General’s Award coverage in conversation with Graeme Wood. His book The Way of the Strangers: Encounters with the Islamic State is this year’s Governor General's Award winner for English-language nonfiction.
From the jury: "The Way of the Strangers: Encounters with the Islamic State by Graeme Wood investigates a much discussed, little understood phenomenon dominating international news. Meticulously researched and fluidly written, this bracing book delves into a contentious facet of contemporary geopolitics."
Graeme Wood is a Canadian journalist, currently working as a national correspondent for The Atlantic. He has written for The New Republic, The New Yorker, Bloomberg Businessweek, The American Scholar, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and many other publications. He was the 2014–2015 Edward R. Murrow Press Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, and he teaches in the political science department at Yale University.
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Trevor Corkum: Congrats on your Governor General’s Award. A meticulous amount of research went into the book. What aspects of this research proved most challenging?
Graeme Wood: By inclination I am distrustful of any story written by a journalist who is not reporting from on-site. So naturally it was a challenge to conduct research on a group that would almost certainly murder me if I visited them. That meant developing research tactics, including online and in-person meetings, that would get me my story without losing me my head.
TC: Your book explores encounters with followers of ISIS from around the world. Is there a particular story that stands out for you as most illustrative of the persuasive recruiting power of ISIS?
GW: I interviewed a kind, older ISIS supporter in Scandinavia, and at the end of our discussion he looked pained, sincerely troubled, by my failure to sign up to his cause. It was then, I later wrote, that I realized his proselytizing on behalf of ISIS was not just an act of terror but also an act of love. He really wanted me to join him in Paradise and wished I could see the world with his clarity. When you discover that the people who want to kill you also want to save you, you have to re-think your moral assessment of them.
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