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Novelist with roots in Beirut wins Whiting Award

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  • Novelist with roots in Beirut wins Whiting Award

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    Oct 28 2006

    Novelist with roots in Beirut wins Whiting Award


    Daily Star staff
    Saturday, October 28, 2006


    BEIRUT: Saudi-born novelist Micheline Aharonian Marcom has been
    awarded one of 10 annual Whiting Writers' Awards for emerging
    authors, each worth $40,000. The winners of this year's prizes -
    given to two novelists, three short story writers, three poets and
    two playwrights in total, all of them in the early stages of their
    careers - were announced in New York on Thursday.

    Marcom was born in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, in 1968, of mixed American,
    Lebanese and Armenian parentage. She grew up in Los Angeles but spent
    her formative summers in Beirut before the Civil War broke out.

    Marcom's first novel, "Three Apples Fell from Heaven," was published
    in 2001. Set in Ottoman Turkey during the tumultuous two-year period
    between 1915 and 1917, the novel caught the attention of critics for
    its stylistic complexity. Marcom's book threw up multiple
    protagonists in a series of interlocking vignettes. The cast includes
    Maritsa, a young woman harboring desires to be a young man; Lucine, a
    low-level employee at the US Embassy and the consul's lover; Sargis,
    a poet losing his mind while hiding out in his mother's attic; and
    Rachel, a ghost of sorts who haunts the novel by offering reflections
    on all the other characters from the bottom of a well.

    If Marcom's debut dealt directly with the Armenian genocide, then her
    follow-up, "The Daydreaming Boy" published in 2004, traces its legacy
    - the emotional aftermath haunting survivors of the massacres living
    in Beirut in the 1960s. A middle-aged man named Vahe distracts
    himself with torrid, adulterous affairs, but they all fail to turn
    his mind from his brutal past, which he sees before him day in and
    day out.
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb

    Again Marcom's language is impressionistic and rich. Some sentences
    go on and on, coiling one vibrant image into another and yet another.
    Other sentences are short and rhythmic. One passage describes a
    photograph of an unknown boy ripped from an old Armenian journal and
    tucked into the protagonist's wallet.

    "His look is the look of sadness - in this photograph I can see it.
    It is not the rags that tell of it, his stance with the bared knee
    slightly bent, or the invisible hands, I assume he has hands. What
    marks the public sadness for this boy?" Marcom writes. "He could very
    well have been my uncle, my mother's youngest cousin; we are kin in
    any case, kin made from an event in history. Not one moment, but many
    bound together and routed from hearths and bundles up in his raggy
    hat-turban - there is of course the moment of the photograph."

    "The Daydreaming Boy" is the second installment in a planned trilogy.
    Marcom is currently a writer-in-residence at Mills College in
    California. The other winner's of this year's Whiting Writers Awards
    are novelist Nina Marie Martinez; short story writers Charles
    D'Ambrosio, Yiyun Li and Patrick O'Keefe; poets Sherwin Bitsui, Suji
    Kwock Kim and Tyehimba Jess; and playwrights Bruce Norris and Stephen
    Adly Guirgis. - The Daily Star
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