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  • People Magazine, Entertainment Weekly Spotlight Upcoming Novel On Th

    PEOPLE MAGAZINE, ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY SPOTLIGHT UPCOMING NOVEL ON THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    armradio.am
    13.07.2012 13:13

    >From People Magazine to Entertainment Weekly, New York Times
    Bestselling author Chris Bohjalian's upcoming novel on the Armenian
    Genocide, The Sandcastle Girls, has made a splash in the literary
    and arts world even before hitting the shelves on July 17th, reported
    the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

    The upcoming July 23rd issue of People Magazine has spotlighted The
    Sandcastle Girls in its "Great Reads - New in Fiction" section and
    described it as "an affecting tale set at the time of a lesser-known
    Holocaust, 1915's Armenian genocide."

    Entertainment Weekly (EW) included the novel on their summer
    must-read list. "The Storytelling structure is precariously ornate
    in this ardent historical romance The Sandcastle Girls, grounded in
    a real-life tragedy known by too few, the Armenian genocide of 1915,"
    noted EW's Lisa Schwarzbaum.

    Vermont's Independent Voice, Seven Days, hailed the novel and labeled
    it as an innovative way to raise awareness for unrecognized human
    rights violations. "Genocide narratives from the point of view of
    the descendants will always resemble the reactions of visitors to
    a monument - sober, elegiac and respectful," noted Seven Days. The
    review further reiterated the novel's role in humanizing the events
    of 1915. "At the opening of the novel, Laura reflects that Americans
    could benefit from a book called The Armenian Genocide for Dummies.

    Indeed, many of us could - but a fiction like Bohjalian's, with its
    power to reach legions of readers, may be far more valuable."

    The Sandcastle Girls brings the reader on a very different kind of
    journey. The spellbinding tale travels between Aleppo, Syria in 1915
    and Bronxville, New York in 2012 - a sweeping historical love story
    steeped in the author's Armenian heritage, making it his most personal
    novel to date.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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