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Book: 'The Sandcastle Girls' Tackles Armenian Genocide

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  • Book: 'The Sandcastle Girls' Tackles Armenian Genocide

    'THE SANDCASTLE GIRLS' TACKLES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Anchorage Daily News, Alaska
    April 10 2013

    By RICK BENTLEY - The Fresno Bee

    "The Sandcastle Girls" by Chris Bohjalian; Doubleday ($25.95)Chris
    Bohjalian wrote a novel 20 years ago based on the Armenian Genocide.

    It was never published."It was a train wreck. Then I started thinking
    why should I write a book about the Armenian Genocide when there
    were so many good ones already, including 'Rise the Euphrates'
    by Carol Edgarian," says Bohjalian. "The manuscript now resides in
    the archives of my alma mater."The Amherst College graduate went on
    to write 11 other books - including his best known work "Midwives" -
    before finally getting back to the subject with "The Sandcastle Girls"
    (Doubleday, $25.95).The book was inspired by his grandparents - Leo
    and Haigoohi - who survived the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians,
    starting in 1915.It's that larger meaning that helped Bohjalian
    write his novel, when his first effort failed. He was determined to
    use the genocide as a backdrop, despite being told by people in the
    publishing industry - fortunately not his editor - that a book like
    "The Sandcastle Girls" would be a career killer. They said a lack of
    knowledge of the killings outside the Armenian community would make
    the book a tough sell.He proved them wrong by telling two stories -
    one about lovers who meet in Syria during the genocide and the other
    about their granddaughter's efforts a century later to understand why
    they were so silent about their youth.The author's own grandparents
    never talked about what happened during that brutal period. Bohjalian
    was able to get a lot of information from his father, Aram, who also
    didn't talk about the genocide when the author was young.When Aram's
    health began to deteriorate in 2009, father and son spent a lot of
    time looking at old family photographs that sparked conversations
    about the family. "The Sandcastle Girls" is dedicated to Aram, and
    Bohjalian's mother-in-law, Sondra Blewer, who both died in 2011.This
    information helped the author write the opposite of a "train wreck."

    The book - which could become a feature film - has earned high praise,
    including being selected as an Oprah Winfrey Book of the Week."I
    have written so many books that were successful, where people thought
    they were crazy ideas. When I started writing a book about midwives,
    I was told no one outside of New England would know what I was talking
    about," says Bohjalian.He was glad that he didn't let the critics
    stop him. "The Sandcastle Girls" has been an educational tool for many
    readers. There are thousands of comments on Bohjalian's Facebook page
    from people who had no knowledge of the genocide until reading about
    it in his book."Because so many people outside the Armenian community
    hadn't heard about the genocide, I was determined to get it right when
    I started this book," says Bohjalian.He is also determined to talk
    about the book as often as possible. The trips give him a chance to
    thank the members of the Armenian community who have embraced the book.

    http://www.adn.com/2013/04/10/2858943/the-sandcastle-girls-tackles-armenian.html

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