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  • Chennai is my favourite city: Balian

    IBN Live
    Chennai | Posted on Feb 25, 2012 at 08:59am IST
    Chennai is my favourite city: Balian


    CHENNAI: For an author of Armenian origin, based in the United States
    =80` it is quite surprising when John D Balian reveals that Chennai is
    his favourite city in India. He offers, "This is actually my fifth
    time in India. I work as a corporate executive now," says the doctor,
    for whom travel is part of the job. He goes on, "But the reason I look
    forward to coming here so often is because Chennai has such a strong
    connection to Armenian heritage. This is something that dates back
    thousands of years." Which is perhaps why the author even made it a
    point to track down a 17th century Armenian church in the city. Don't
    know where that is? On Armenian Street, near Parrys corner of course.

    Balian was in Chennai on Thursday for the launch of his bestseller,
    Gray Wolves and White Doves. So far, the novel has been distributed in
    the US alone, where it was released last year. For those unfamiliar
    with the title, it revolves around a largely 'autobiographical' tale
    of a young boy (Hanna) in a tiny village at the edge of the Turkish
    plains in Anatolia. "All the events in the book are factual," the
    author says and e-laborates, "Growing up in the ghettos, I faced
    adversity very early on." This is apparently reflected by the many
    twists in the book.

    After tragedy strikes in his family, five-year-old Hanna is forced to
    go into exile and later, is despatched to a seminary in Jerusalem with
    a new identity; caught in a crossfire of 'unholy' wars, only to escape
    years later as a fugitive on the run. "I always thought that my life
    would make for a thrilling and entertaining book. It took over eight
    years of writing," the author says.

    For Balian, it was meant to be a work of literature, not merely a
    novel.

    Also, he adds, "I wanted to leave a legacy for my three sons,
    something to remember me by and where we came from." But how much
    impact a story such as this one - with its backdrop of Middle eastern
    conflict and suppression - can find in India? Balian says, "Actually,
    I've had a lot of positive feedback from Indian readers in the US
    already." In fact, he recalls an email sent to him by an 80-year-old
    resident of Bengaluru. "This gentleman told me in his mail that he
    would meditate everyday," the author recounts. "And then he said that
    reading my book was like meditation for him!" Clearly, it was a good
    decision to market this book offering in India.

    Asked when the book will hit Turkish book stands, the author says, "I
    believe it will be a best seller there. But publication houses are not
    too liberal." He cites an example of a publisher jailed, simply for
    the use of the word, 'genocide'. As consolation, Balian adds that the
    book is slated to be translated into various languages - Armenian and
    then Turkish, Chinese and Arabic - to make it more accessible for a
    global public.

    http://ibnlive.in.com/news/chennai-is-my-favourite-city-balian/233478-60-120.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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