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  • 'Skeletons' author Bohjalian coming to Coral Gables, Palm Beach

    Sun-Sentinel.com, FL
    Feb 15 2009


    'Skeletons' author Bohjalian coming to Coral Gables, Palm Beach

    By Chauncey Mabe | Books editor
    February 15, 2009

    For most of his career, Chris Bohjalian has been considered a woman's
    novelist ' not surprising for a writer who came to national attention
    in 1997 when Oprah Winfrey selected his fifth work, Midwives, for her
    televised book club.

    That's started to change with Skeletons at the Feast, published last
    year and now out in paperback. His first attempt at a historical novel
    dramatizes the suffering of Jews and Germans fleeing before the
    advancing Soviet army in the final months of World War II.

    "A number of readers were surprised and gratified I was trying
    something new, even if the experience was too brutal for some of my
    female readers," Bohjalian says. "But I have a lot more male readers
    than I used to have. Men found this book."

    Women who can tolerate the depictions of privation and suffering will
    find a love triangle at the novel's core: An aristocratic young
    Prussian woman, a Scottish P.O.W. and a dashing Jewish man posing as a
    Nazi officer, all struggling to survive.



    "I wanted to explore the complicity of the average German in the
    Holocaust," he says. "That's the only thing I knew going in."

    Bohjalian's ideas come to him unbidden ' he's never finished any of
    his 12 books wondering what to write next ' but sometimes the
    gestation period is long. The inspiration for Skeletons at the Feast
    came in 1997, when a friend at his daughter's kindergarten in Vermont
    asked him to read a grandmother's diary.

    "She was part of the Prussian exodus fleeing the Soviet advance at the
    end of the war," he says. "I was writing contemporary novels then, so
    I shared the diary with Random House. They said it was interesting but
    nothing new."

    Meanwhile, Bohjalian steadily produced best-selling novels about
    ordinary, often small-town folks under extraordinary pressure. But he
    never wrote with an eye toward keeping up the stratospheric popularity
    of Midwives.

    "Oprah's selection was the greatest commercial and professional
    blessing, a gift," says Bohjalian, 48. "But trying to write to
    maintain that kind of attention wouldn't be fun. I start writing at 5
    a.m. If a book's exciting me, it's easy to get up. If it's not, I drop
    it."

    Besides, readers are smart. Bohjalian says they would know right away
    if he tried to fake it.

    "I've talked to enough book groups to know they can tell if you're
    trying to phone it in," he says. "They'll turn away. There are so many
    books and authors out there."

    Bohjalian's novels ' The Double Bind, The Buffalo Soldier, Before You
    Know Kindness, among them ' defy categorization. Too well written to
    be mere popular fiction, Bohjalian's books are too popular to gain
    acceptance as literary novels. He gets rave reviews but, as he jokes,
    seems in little danger of winning a National Book Award.

    "My brother told me I'm a 'tweener,'" Bohjalian says. "He said I fall
    between genres. I knew exactly what he meant. I don't mind. It means
    my readers don't expect formula from me. I'm not constrained by reader
    expectations."

    In 2006, Bohjalian read Armageddon, Max Hastings' history of the last
    year of World War II. Remembering the diary, he asked the woman who
    wrote it, by then 77 and living in Portland, Maine, for permission to
    base a novel on it.

    "I told her, 'It won't be exactly your story, but you'll see it before
    publication,'" Bohjalian recalls. "She said fine. So I started looking
    up all the Holocaust survivors and Germans I could find. I was off and
    running."

    The diary gave Bohjalian the time, setting and circumstances, and two
    characters, a 16-year-old girl and her mother. None of the other
    characters in his book appear in the diary. The cast "exploded" once
    he started talking to survivors.

    "The stories people had ' no time was more brutal," he says. "But
    there were also astonishing acts of kindness. All the people I
    interviewed were 70 to 90. They survived because some angel parachuted
    into their lives."

    A New York Times and Publishers Weekly best-seller, Skeletons at the
    Feast did well with critics too.

    Margot Livesey, writing in The Washington Post, called it "a deeply
    satisfying novel, one that asks readers to consider, and reconsider,
    how they would rise to the challenge of terrible deprivation and
    agonizing moral choices."

    Bohjalian says writing about the Holocaust may show him the way to
    write about the biggest tragedy in his own family history, the
    Armenian genocide. He's already tried it once ' one of the 400-page
    manuscripts he abandoned.

    "I started a novel that was set in Turkey in 1913 and South Beach in
    the present day," Bohjalian says, laughing as he adds, "It's a
    terrible book. My God, is it bad. It's the kind of train wreck where
    you don't even want to look for bodies."

    Maybe, he muses, the family stories from his father and aunt were "too
    close to home. Maybe I just needed more gray hair, or less hair, to
    approach material of this gravitas. Maybe at 40 I just wasn't old
    enough to work my way into material this important."



    Meanwhile, Bohjalian jokes, the 21st century has made him a "dinosaur"
    on not one but two counts. In addition to novels, he has written a
    weekly column for the Burlington Free Press since 1992.



    Books and newspapers, the very definition of "old media."

    "My world is pretty wonderful," Bohjalian says by phone from Vermont,
    where he lives with his wife, the photographer Victoria Blewer, and
    their daughter. "But as a novelist, I'm not exempt from the challenges
    of the digital age. Maybe I'll become a waiter."

    While many of his generation can't imagine being without a book at
    their bedside, Bohjalian says, younger readers, their attention fixed
    on computers, TV shows, cell phones or video games, can go weeks
    without reading.

    "It's not that they're illiterate," he says. "But they approach text
    differently. They read blogs and posts online."

    But if fewer people are reading the old-fashioned way, those who do
    are more passionate than ever. Bohjalian finds them in book groups.

    "Three or four times a week I'm on speaker phone with book groups," he
    says. "That's the change the digital age has placed on
    novelists. We're no longer disembodied faces on a book jacket.

    "Thanks to digital technology, readers can connect to novelists as
    people. They can ask us questions. We're neighbors."

    http://www.sun-sentinel.com/feat ures/lifestyle/sfl-arts0215bohjaliansbfeb15,0,6744 844.story?page=2
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