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Book: Significant debut inspired by a long-forgotten atrocity: Anyus

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  • Book: Significant debut inspired by a long-forgotten atrocity: Anyus

    Belfast Telegraph, Ireland
    June 14, 2014 Saturday

    Significant debut inspired by a long-forgotten atrocity: Anyush


    The inspiration for Martine Madden''s debut novel, Anyush, came from a
    photograph of a woman''s naked, emaciated body by the road beside
    those of her two dead children.

    Taken in secret by young German soldier Armin Wegner during the
    massacre of Turkey''s Armenians in the genocide of 1915, this
    devastating image stayed with Madden, then herself the mother of
    several small children.

    Along with the discovery of these photographs it was Madden''s
    friendship with two Lebanese Armenians during the years she lived with
    her husband in Abu Dhabi that gave her the idea for her novel.

    The final impetus came when having returned home to Ireland, Madden
    sat at her computer, composing a piece for the local primary school on
    the treatment and prevention of head lice (of all things). Putting
    words on a virtual page reminded her of how much she had missed
    writing and, now her youngest had begun school, she found herself with
    the quiet time to get back to it.

    Written in deceptively simple language, this meticulously researched
    and moving novel is based on the true stories of individuals who lived
    through the terrible atrocities of the Armenian genocide.

    It is told through a series of diary entries of Dr Charles Stewart,
    who runs a local hospital with his wife Hetty, and interspersed with
    third-person narratives of Anyush Charcoardian and Captain Jahan
    Orfalea, whose dangerous love affair forms its central theme.

    The eponymous main character, Anyush, is a young Armenian girl who
    lives in the small village of Trebizond with her cantankerous mother
    Khandut and her beloved grandmother Gohar.

    Her strength of character is evident from the opening chapter where we
    see her defiance and bravery against the gendarmes.

    We follow her story as she witnesses the pure barbarism of war and as
    she struggles with the destruction of her village, her mother''s
    beatings, the lecherous advances of the village trapper, Husik, and
    the immense difficulty of carrying on an affair with a Turkish
    soldier.

    Madden''s descriptions of the final journey, the death march of the
    Armenians out of Trebizond, their malnutrition, suffering and
    inevitable death are as every bit harrowing as the closing scenes of
    John Steinbeck''s The Grapes of Wrath.

    This is a significant work by Madden, and one that sheds important
    light on a little-talkedabout atrocity.

    It''s the sort of book that gets under your skin and stays with you
    long after you have finished reading it.


    From: Baghdasarian
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