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Louis de Bernieres' latest novel, "Birds Without Wings"

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  • Louis de Bernieres' latest novel, "Birds Without Wings"

    National Public Radio (NPR)
    SHOW: All Things Considered 9:00 AM EST NPR
    September 7, 2004 Tuesday

    Louis de Bernieres' latest novel, "Birds Without Wings"

    ANCHORS: ROBERT SIEGEL

    REPORTERS: ALAN CHEUSE

    ROBERT SIEGEL, host:

    Readers and moviegoers know Louis de Bernieres as the author of the
    story of "Captain Corelli's Mandolin." It's set in a Greek village
    during the occupation by Axis forces. His new book, "Birds Without
    Wings," is set earlier and across the Aegean Sea. Alan Cheuse has a
    review.

    ALAN CHEUSE reporting:

    "Birds Without Wings" takes us to the Anatolian coastal village of
    Eskibahce at the beginning of the 20th century. It's a small but
    thriving place with a multireligious and multiethnic population,
    mainly Turks and Greeks, but also a number of Armenians and Kurds,
    Muslims and Christians alike, and a lively market where one of the
    main narrators, a potter named Iskander, sells his wares. The potter
    is one of a number of multiple narrators telling us about the village
    and its inhabitants, his son Karatavuk who grows up to become a
    soldier and fights the British at Gallipoli, and the boy's Christian
    friend Mehmetcik, whom he teaches to write. And we also hear about
    the village's richest man, Rustem Bey, whose first wife betrays him
    and who buys a concubine in an Istanbul brothel and brings her home
    to Eskibahce.

    And then there's the Christian girl Philothei, so beautiful her
    father has her put on a veil, and her homely friend Drosoula and
    Mehmet, the tinsman, and Abdulhamid Hodja, the local imam, and his
    beloved steed Nilafor(ph) and Leonidas, the dissident Greek teacher,
    and George Upete Theodoru(ph), a local Greek entrepreneur, and the
    disfigured squatter known as Dog who lives in some nearby ancient
    caves and--well, this all must sound exhausting. But de Bernieres
    portrays everyone in this large cast of characters quite memorably
    and illuminates their intertwining lives and fates to make a
    marvelously engaging story of a village and a place and a way of life
    that's broken only by a disastrous war, about which we learn a great
    deal. It's also the story of the rise of Kemal Ataturk, who turns his
    patchwork country into a nation of some stature.

    Among dozens and dozens of lovely chapter-length anecdotes, we hear
    the origins of the naming of a character called Ali the Snow-bringer,
    who makes a living hauling ice down from the mountains. On the day of
    his birth, we learn, snow fell for the first time in nearly a
    century, leaving behind a new child and a communal memory that has
    the savor of those stories that tell of lost Edens and magical lands.
    The entire book has that same savor.

    SIEGEL: The book is "Birds Without Wings" by Louis de Bernieres. Our
    reviewer is Alan Cheuse.

    (Soundbite of music)

    MICHELE NORRIS (Host): This is NPR, National Public Radio.
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