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Book Review: The Gendarme By Mark T. Mustian

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  • Book Review: The Gendarme By Mark T. Mustian

    BOOK REVIEW: THE GENDARME BY MARK T. MUSTIAN
    by Mark Gavoor

    Armenian Reporter
    http://www.reporter.am/index.cfm?objectid=47A0ED00-4323-11E0-99E90003FF3452C2
    Feb 28 2011

    I just finished this book which I received as a Christmas present.

    When I first read the dust jacket blurb, I thought: "eh... I am not
    sure I will enjoy this. The premise is too far fetched." I read it
    because I was interested, call it morbid curiosity if you would like,
    in seeing how the author, Mark Mustian, would develop the plot.

    I also read it because I have, as many Armenians do, an equally morbid
    curiosity in hashing, re-hashing, and forever trying to make sense
    of the Armenian Genocide. So, I read it the book and must commend
    Mark Mustian for weaving what I believed was a lame premise into a
    very good and engaging novel.

    Mustian attempts to relate the Armenian Genocide from the point of
    view of Turkish Gendarme charged with taking a group of Armenians
    from Harput to Syria. This fellow Emmett Conn, the anglicized version
    of the man born as Ahmet Khan, lost much of his memory from an injury
    sustained after the Genocide at the Battle of Gallipoli. Circumstances
    lead him to end up in the United States living in the state of
    Georgia. At the end of his life, Emmett begins having dreams of his
    role in the ethnic cleansing of Armenians from Turkey. The book is
    about the piecing together of his memory and coming to terms with
    his past and past actions before he dies.

    I do not want to dwell more on the plot and the details of the book.

    The power of the premise and how Mark Mustian brings it to life is
    powerful. The reader needs to let the novel guide him and part of the
    experience is lost if the entire plot is laid out in a review. It
    is noteworthy to add that Mustian has done a wonderful job writing
    about the Genocide and forced march form an Armenian region from the
    point of view of a Turkish Gendarme. Armenians tend to portray Turks
    as villains and heartless enemies. They are not often humanized in
    the way Mustian has. I am not certain if any other author, Armenian,
    Turk, or one of another nationality has attempted this. I believe it
    has been done with the Holocaust. The only example that comes to mind
    is the 1974 film, The Night Porter which was quite a controversial
    and disturbing film.

    Mark Mustian is a bit like Michael Arlen, the author of Passage to
    Ararat. He came to realize and investigate his Armenian background
    later in life. Mark Mustian knew of his Armenian heritage but he is not
    prototypical in that he did not have a grandparent or great-grandparent
    that went through the horrors of the 1915 Genocide.

    In fact, his paternal grandfather immigrated to the Unite States so
    much earlier than most Armenians that he fought for the Confederacy in
    the Civil War. If he has enough information and background, I would
    hope to see Mark Mustian write the story of his grandfather.

    In this 30s, Mustian became interest in his Armenian heritage was
    kindled when he read Peter Balakian's Black Dog of Fate. Reading that
    book inspired Mustian to learn more about Armenians in general and the
    Genocide more specifically. He was so inspired that he took a trip to
    Turkey and Syria from August 1-8, 2008. I can imagine the idea for the
    book was born from that trip. Mustian has posted a brief travel log
    on the his website: http://www.markmustian.com/mmustian-travelogue.htm

    Also like Michael Arlen, Mark Mustian embraced his heritage or part
    of his heritage. The cynical would say both of them embraced their
    heritage because there was a book in it for them. Maybe so, but I
    look at this glass as half full. I am amazed how these two literary
    gentlemen responded when they were exposed to Armenian people,
    history, and culture. Both of them were fascinated enough to make
    trips. Michael Arlen went both to Armenia (Soviet Armenia in those
    days) and Turkey. Mark Mustian went to Turkey and Syria. That is no
    mean commitment to learning something new about ones background.

    Both men also being fixated and obsessed with the Genocide. Mustian's
    entire book is dedicated to this huge, grim, and recent episode in
    Armenian history. And why should they become fixated and obsessed?

    Most serious Armenians are obsessed with it. We all think and write
    about it. We are still trying to come to grips with it and get closure
    on it 96 years after the fact. As Mustian points in the suffix of
    the book that many modern Turks do not understand why Armenians are
    obsessed with the events of 1915. The Turks have moved on.

    Of course, they have moved on and only dwell on these events from 1915
    when Armenians raise it to the levels of national and international
    press and politics. The victors, the vanquishers, never dwell on the
    negative parts of their wins. Turkey survived and emerged from the
    ravages of World War I and the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire
    with a Republic that for the most part has thrived. They celebrate
    that and do not dwell on how they secured that and who might have
    suffered along the way. It is no different than the United States. We
    celebrate our "purple mountains majesty from sea to shining sea." We
    do not dwell on the native peoples whose land, lives, and lifestyles
    we destroyed to take over the land. Many Americans are surprised at
    how much the remaining American Indians are obsessed and fixated on
    this. The dynamic at hand is quite clear... at least to me.

    One can also read a short biography of Mark Mustian on the website.

    You will learn that beyond being an author, he is a
    lawyer and city commissioner in Tallahassee, FL. If
    nothing else, I highly recommend reading the backstory
    http://www.markmustian.com/mmustian-gendarme-backstory.htm. It is
    exactly like the backstory in the novel, I would have called it a
    suffix, appendix, or have put it at the beginning and called it a
    prefix. Read it... it is a good, short, piece of writing.

    The Gendarme is quite well done and worth reading if the subject matter
    appeals to you. It is interesting if you are Armenian and should be
    of interest to Turks as well. I would generally recommend it to anyone.




    From: A. Papazian
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