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Book Review: Paradise Lost Smyrna 1922, by Giles Milton

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  • Book Review: Paradise Lost Smyrna 1922, by Giles Milton

    ic Wales, United Kingdom
    May 3 2008


    Paradise Lost Smyrna 1922, by Giles Milton

    May 3 2008 by Emily Lambert, Western Mail

    HIS previous subjects include the spice wars and the white slave trade
    ` now journalist-cum-historian Giles Milton has turned his attention
    to the massacre of Smyrna, the modern-day Turkish city of Izmir.

    Celebrated as Islam's city of tolerance, Smyrna was until last century
    home to thousands of Europeans, Americans and Armenians; a thriving
    port whose cosmopolitan population enjoyed peace and prosperity.

    This harmony came to an abrupt end on September 9, 1922, when it
    witnessed the terrible backlash of Turkey's brutal three-year war with
    Greece. Milton describes how two million innocent civilians were
    caught up in the conflict as victorious Turkish troops entered
    Smyrna. Women were raped, men tortured and hundreds of thousands
    deported or killed.

    Hopes that Greece's allies would intervene were met by silence from
    the 21 battleships moored in Smyrna Bay.

    The book charts harrowing scenes as desperate residents and refugees
    flee the city's burning buildings only to be swamped by the crowds at
    the harbour wall.

    Eyewitness testimonies, diary entries, and letters ` some of them
    published for the first time ` are all part of this meticulously
    researched, informed account. Milton actually met survivors of the
    massacre, who he says are haunted by the destruction of their city
    `every day of their lives.'

    The quality of the sources Milton employs makes up for the fact that
    their constant quotation sometimes slows down what is a very absorbing
    narrative.

    With Paradise Lost Milton has built on his reputation for digging up a
    little-told piece of history and bringing it to life in this, his
    fifth non-fiction book.

    At times a tale of personal suffering, it is also provides an
    examination of political and religious relations at the time.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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