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City Reads 'The Sandcastle Girls'

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  • City Reads 'The Sandcastle Girls'

    CITY READS 'THE SANDCASTLE GIRLS'

    Glendale News-Press (California)
    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
    February 12, 2014 Wednesday

    by Nicole Charky, Glendale News-Press, Calif.

    Feb. 12--Novelist Chris Bohjalian knows that he inherited a history
    of survival.

    As the descendant of Armenian genocide survivors, The New York Times
    best-selling author discovered resilience was in his blood, inspiring
    his epic love story "The Sandcastle Girls."

    Library staff selected his work for Glendale's One Book/One City
    project, an open invitation for local residents to read a novel
    together.

    "They found me," said Bohjalian, the first Armenian American author
    to be featured in the reading event in conversation with City Clerk
    Ardy Kassakhian at 7 p.m. on Feb. 27 at the Glendale Central Library.

    "I'm the grandson of survivors of the Armenian genocide, so this story
    has always been important to me," said the Vermont-based novelist.

    "Writing 'The Sandcastle Girls,' however, helped me to discover the
    part of my ancestral DNA that is deeply Armenian."

    Bohjalian's historical fiction travels between present day and 1915
    Aleppo, Syria. Armenian American character Laura Petrosian pursues
    her heritage, discovering her grandparents' romance during World War
    I and unraveling family secrets kept hidden for years.

    The novel has achieved critical success both in and outside the
    Armenian community for a simple reason, Bohjalian said.

    "It's a love story," he said.

    "The Sandcastle Girls" was translated into more than 25 languages
    and read in communities without direct ties to the Armenian culture.

    "I wrote this book for non-Armenians. Armenians already know this
    story. Non-Armenians read it," he said.

    Bohjalian's book was chosen for the city's reading project for a number
    of reasons, said Chuck Wike, spokesman for the Glendale Public Library.

    "His work is wildly popular," Wike said. "He's a wonderful speaker,
    and this novel should resonate with our community."

    Bohjalian believes the support from Armenian National Committee of
    America and his Los Angeles-area friends helped propel his book to
    critical acclaim, landing his novel a spot on Oprah's Book Club.

    The One Book/One Glendale project now means that additional readers
    in the community can find the novel and learn more about the genocide.

    "I've met a lot of Armenians in Glendale, Los Angeles, who read this
    book when it first came out and were deeply touched by it. That was
    gratifying," he said.

    Hardcover, paperback, audiobook, large type, eBook and eAudio versions
    of "The Sandcastle Girls" are available online and at all Glendale
    Library, Arts & Culture locations.

    ___

    What: Chris Bohjalian in conversation with Ardy Kassakhian about
    Bohjalian's book "The Sandcastle Girls"

    Where: Glendale Central Library, 222 E. Harvard St.

    When: Thursday, Feb. 27, 7 p.m.

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