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Book Review: Paradise Lost by Giles Milton

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  • Book Review: Paradise Lost by Giles Milton

    The New Yorker
    July 28 2008


    Books Briefly Noted: Paradise Lost by Giles Milton
    (Basic; $27.95)


    In September, 1922, after the Turkish forces of Mustafa Kemal defeated
    a Greek army that had recklessly occupied the Anatolian city of
    Smyrna, members of Smyrna's Greek, Armenian, and expatriate
    communities were killed, raped, and robbed. Soon, a half million
    people were trapped on the port's narrow wharves, the city in flames
    behind them; `The streets were stacked with dead,' a British officer
    wrote. Milton weaves the Armenian genocide, the birth of modern
    Turkey, and the tragic inanities of Versailles into his story, but his
    focus is the destruction of the multi-ethnic, religiously diverse
    cosmopolis of Smyrna (now the Turkish city of Izmir). He has a
    tendency to idolize the Levantines, dynasties of European `merchant
    princes' who remained oblivious as Greeks and Turks committed
    atrocities closer and closer to their enclave. Milton's more
    compelling hero is Asa Jennings, a five-foot-tall
    Y.M.C.A. administrator who, by bluffing, begging, and desperately
    improvising, single-handedly saved tens of thousands of lives. '¦



    http://www.newyorker.com/arts/reviews/b rieflynoted/2008/07/28/080728crbn_brieflynoted1/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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