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Chris Bohjalian To Present At The Celebration Of Authors Event In Us

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  • Chris Bohjalian To Present At The Celebration Of Authors Event In Us

    CHRIS BOHJALIAN TO PRESENT AT THE CELEBRATION OF AUTHORS EVENT IN USA

    ARMENPRESS
    9 October, 2012
    YEREVAN

    YEREVAN, OCTOBER 9, ARMENPRESS: Bohjalian, author of 15 books
    including "Midwives," an Oprah's Book Club pick, and "The Sandcastle
    Girls," his latest novel set during the Armenian Genocide of 1915,
    will participate in this year's A Celebration of Authors event at
    Worcester Public Library. Armenpress report referring to News Telegram
    that also appearing will be Leah Hager Cohen, author of several works
    including her novel "The Grief of Others" and a member of the faculty
    at the College of the Holy Cross; and Elinor Lipman, author of short
    stories, essays, poetry, fiction and her most recent book, a humorous
    take on our techno-obsessed culture, "Tweet Land of Liberty." The
    event is a fundraiser for the Worcester Public Library Foundation,
    whose programs and services benefit the library.

    Bohjalian grew up in Westchester County, New York, and now lives in
    Vermont. In the interview with News Telegram he told about his first
    speaking engagement in Worcester, which was at the Tatnuck Bookseller
    & Sons back in the 1990s and hosted by the store's former owners,
    Larry and Gloria Abramoff.

    Because Bohjalian had yet to establish his reputation as a writer,
    a crowd was not expected - but that didn't take into account the
    fact that Worcester is a city with a considerable and close-knit
    Armenian community.

    "They had put out only about 15 chairs because they thought that was
    all that would show up for this guy from Vermont that no one had heard
    of," Bohjalian said. "Well, because my name is Armenian there must have
    been 70 people there, maybe more, and Larry was bring out more and more
    and more chairs," as the Armenian community came out to support a total
    stranger whose last name ends in i-a-n. "It was glorious," he said.

    Armenpress reports that Bohjalian's breakthrough, "Midwives," would
    shortly follow and he was a literary stranger no more after the phone
    rang one day and it was Oprah telling him how much she liked his book.

    The result was instant, high-profile bestseller status. He has received
    many awards since, including the New England Society Book Award for
    "The Night Strangers."

    His latest novel, "The Sandcastle Girls," finds the Armenian theme
    resurgent after many years, since even before the Tatnuck Bookseller
    metaphorical group hug. Published in July 2012, it is not his first
    novel concerning his personal heritage, but it likely is the only one
    you will ever read. It was 1993 when he made his first exploration of
    the Armenian Genocide, the systematic extermination of the Armenian
    minority within the Ottoman Empire, in what is now Turkey from 1915 to
    1923. Bohjalian said that, even as he wrote, he knew it was a deeply
    troubled manuscript. "That novel was a train wreck," he said. It
    was never published and the manuscript now is in the archives of his
    alma mater, Amherst College. "If you are a scholar or a masochist,
    you can go read it," he said.

    Bohjalian was asked why almost 20 years later, he was prompted to
    revisit the theme.

    "First of all because the story is so important," he said. "There
    is a direct link between the Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust,
    the Cambodian Killing Fields, Serbia, Rwanda, Darfur. Secondly,
    the story is, as my narrator puts it 'the slaughter you know next to
    nothing about.' America does not know this story because Turkey and
    its allies continue to deny it. It's not taught in schools."

    Thirdly, he began spending a lot of time with his father, whose health
    had been deteriorating, looking through old family photographs, when a
    good friend, Khatchig Mouradian, editor of Armenian Weekly, encouraged
    him to try an exploration of his ethnic roots again. So he did, and
    says he learned an immense amount in the process that enlivened the
    few facts he had going into it. Though both his grandparents on his
    father's side were genocide survivors, he knew very little about what
    they experienced in 1915.

    "Like the grandchild of survivors, if somebody's half Armenian,
    you certainly know so many of the basics of the Armenian genocide,"
    he said. "What I was doing with this novel was creating characters
    that I cared about and that I hoped my readers would care about and
    would bring the story to life."

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