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Book: Love In The Ruins: Death And Rebirth In The Shadow Of Genocide

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  • Book: Love In The Ruins: Death And Rebirth In The Shadow Of Genocide

    LOVE IN THE RUINS: DEATH AND REBIRTH IN THE SHADOW OF GENOCIDE.

    The Weekly Standard
    September 10, 2012 Monday

    by Diane Scharper, The Weekly Standard
    Vol. 17 No. 48

    As Chris Bohjalian tells it, the years between 1915 and 1923 were the
    most nightmarish eight years of Armenian history. Yet the horrific
    events of that time are generally not included in history courses,
    and are not so well known outside the Armenian community. No longer.

    Bohjalian describes what happened to the Armenians in grisly detail
    in this compelling novel.

    Deftly mixing fact and fiction, he tells the story of the massacre
    of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians through a tale that spans
    generations and continents, its characters linked together by a
    series of photographs.The plot concerns a family secret, and as the
    secret unravels, it sheds light on the genocide, which began in April
    1915 when the Ottoman Turks decided to exterminate their Armenian
    neighbors. Writers, physicians, professors, businessmen, scientists,
    religious leaders all were arrested, jailed, deported, or killed.

    Armenians (who have been Christians for nearly two millennia) were
    ordered to convert to Islam, and ordinary citizens, including women
    and children, were taken from their homes and marched often naked
    into the desert where they were raped, gathered in deportation camps,
    and starved. Some were tied to trees and shot; mothers watched as
    their sons and daughters were murdered, and vice versa.

    Focusing on the years 1915-16, Bohjalian relates his story primarily
    through the eyes of Laura Petrosian and her grandparents, Armen and
    Elizabeth. Other characters offer perspectives as well, including a
    Turkish physician who tries to save wounded Armenians, a no-nonsense
    German nun who runs an orphanage for Armenian children, an Armenian
    woman whose physician husband has been murdered, and an 8-year-old
    girl who has witnessed the decapitation of her mother and sister. Two
    German soldiers, anxious to document the massacre, illegally photograph
    the carnage around them.

    But the death and destruction are balanced by the love between the
    two protagonists. Armen Petrosian is a displaced Armenian whose wife
    and infant daughter have been lost and are presumed dead. Elizabeth
    Endicott is a young American who, with her father, has come to
    Aleppo, Syria, where they will stay at the American consulate and help
    displaced survivors. A recent Mount Holyoke graduate, Elizabeth hails
    from an upper-middle-class Boston family and has led a sheltered life.

    She comes to Aleppo prepared only by a brief course in Armenian
    language and an equally brief course in nursing. Armen and Elizabeth
    are attracted to one another early on, but are soon separated. He
    travels to Egypt, where he enlists in the fight against the Turks;
    she stays behind in Aleppo to volunteer in a hospital. They begin
    to correspond, and most of the story occurs as Armen and Elizabeth
    separately experience the horrors of the genocide.Years later after
    the two had gone to America, married, had children and grandchildren,
    and died their granddaughter Laura, a novelist who specializes in
    light fiction, finds their letters and sees their photographs in a
    museum. Inspired by her forebears' courage, and believing that the
    story of the massacres needs to be told, she decides to write and
    publish the family saga.

    This is the novel Bohjalian has written. The fictional Laura provides
    context and unity to what could easily be an unwieldy story, but
    also serves as a stand-in for Bohjalian himself, a grandchild of
    Armenian immigrants who uses family memories as well as photographs and
    historical documents to tell the story. Bohjalian's evocative language
    enhances the illusion of reality. In one passage, Armen remembers
    walking with Elizabeth to the bazaar: [T]hey were so close that he had
    been able to inhale the rose-scented powder she had sprinkled on her
    skin beneath her clothes. Once, when she smiled, words had failed him
    completely. And while the reappearance of one minor character seems
    somewhat contrived, Bohjalian's exquisite prose more than makes up
    for any flaws. He weaves the story like threads in a rug, each thread
    adding color and shadow to a scene. Each scene builds into a larger
    picture, and each picture adds texture to the numerous story lines.

    Indeed, so filled is it with the suspense of life and death that The
    Sandcastle Girls is difficult to categorize. The story is fiction,
    but is true. It's history, but it's also art.

    Diane Scharper teaches English at Towson University and is the author,
    most recently, of Reading Lips and Other Ways to Overcome a Disability.

    http://www.weeklystandard.com/articles/love-ruins_651356.html

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