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  • 'Sandcastle Girls' a story of love, world history and the human cond

    Florida Times-Union, FL
    July 22 2012

    Book Review: 'Sandcastle Girls' a story of love, world history and the
    human condition

    Connection with the characters makes epic journey worth the trip

    By Brandy Hilboldt Allport


    In this novel told through flashbacks that range from 1915 to 2012,
    author Chris Bohjalian relates a story of love, world history and the
    human condition. These topics give birth to words on book jacket
    blurbs such as `spell binding,' `sweeping' and `epic.' Such labels and
    the literary concepts themselves are often too big. Readers of these
    tales can never make an intimate connection with the characters or
    find purchase to hang on for the journey. This is decidedly not the
    case in `The Sandcastle Girls.'

    Bohjalian deftly widens a telescopic lens to encompass the `Meds
    Yeghern,' or `Great Calamity' of the Armenian genocide and then
    narrows it so that readers focus on the characters and join them in
    their passage through the story.

    First, there is Laura Petrosian, a novelist who lives in the suburbs
    of New York. She decides to research the history of her Armenian
    heritage to make sense of her grandparents' past. It is a past, into
    which she has vivid but disjointed glimpses. Laura uncovers a family
    secret during her research. Next, there is Petrosian's grandmother,
    Elizabeth. It is around Elizabeth's humanitarian efforts that the
    flashbacks to 1915 revolve. Elizabeth, a Mount Holyoke College
    graduate travels with her father to Aleppo, Syria, on behalf of the
    Boston-based Friends of Armenia. Elizabeth soon meets Armen, an
    engineer who has lost his wife and daughter. Because of Bohjalian's
    writing style, which never rings a false note as it moves from
    present-day New York to the tragedy of World War I, his characters are
    as real as our own relatives. The well-researched history that forms
    the background informs, intrigues and enchants - even as recollections
    of horror mount.

    Chris Bohjalian lives in Vermont with his wife and daughter.
    `Sandcastle' is his 15th book. His titles include New York Times
    best-sellers `The Double Bind,' `The Night Strangers' and `Skeletons
    at the Feast.' His novel, `Midwives,' garnered the No. 1 spot on the
    New York Times list and was an Oprah's Book Club selection.


    http://jacksonville.com/entertainment/literature/2012-07-22/story/book-review-sandcastle-girls-story-love-world-history-and




    From: A. Papazian
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