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Book Review: Like Water On Stone By Dana Walrath

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  • Book Review: Like Water On Stone By Dana Walrath

    BOOK REVIEW: LIKE WATER ON STONE BY DANA WALRATH

    Seven Days
    Nov 19 2014

    By Margot Harrison

    When author Dana Walrath was a young girl, she asked her mother about
    her grandmother's childhood in Armenia. The answer had a stark horror
    to it: "After her parents were killed, she hid during the day and ran
    at night with Uncle Benny and Aunt Alice from their home in Palu to
    the orphanage in Aleppo."

    Those words "haunted" her, the Underhill author recalls in a note
    attached to her new young-adult novel in verse, Like Water on Stone.

    When Walrath was growing up, she adds, her family "didn't speak about
    the genocide" of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire in 1915, in which
    about a million and a half people died.

    That silence is nothing unusual. In his 2012 novel about the Armenian
    genocide, The Sandcastle Girls, Lincoln author Chris Bohjalian called
    it "The Slaughter You Know Next to Nothing About." But with the
    centenary of those terrible events approaching, both these Vermont
    authors demonstrate that stories can and should keep memory alive.

    Walrath's grandmother died before her birth, and the tale she
    recounts in Like Water on Stone is "entirely imagined," she writes
    in her author's note. It's imagined with verve, vividness and far
    more moments of grace and beauty than one would expect from a story
    about three children fleeing institutionalized mass murder. In short,
    what may sound like a punishing read is actually an absorbing and
    inspiring tale, with a verse format that makes it fleet on its feet.

    Trained as an anthropologist, Walrath knows something about the power
    of storytelling. She holds an MFA in writing from the Vermont College
    of Fine Arts, has taught at the University of Vermont College of
    Medicine and recently delivered a TEDx talk on the therapeutic power
    of comics in treating dementia patients, which landed her in the pages
    of Entertainment Weekly. Those insights were grounded in Walrath's
    experience of caring for her aging mother, which she chronicled in
    her graphic memoir Aliceheimer's.

    There are no pictures in Like Water on Stone. But it also demonstrates
    the healing force of narrative. As anthropologists know, children --
    and adults, for that matter -- will confront all manner of horrors when
    they're presented in a setting that offers a touch of otherworldly
    magic and the promise of a happy ending. So it is that Like Water
    on Stone opens like a folktale, with these words spoken by an ardziv
    (eagle):

    Three young ones,

    one black pot,

    a single quill,

    and a tuft of red wool

    are enough to start

    a new life

    in a new land.

    I know this is true

    because I saw it.

    The "three young ones" are 13-year-old twins Shahen and Sosi Donabedian
    and their 5-year-old sister, Mariam. Their harrowing journey from
    mountainous Palu to the Syrian desert -- and thence to America --
    follows that of Walrath's grandmother and her siblings.

    The versifying eagle, who becomes the children's protector, is the
    novel's only supernatural element and its closest thing to a neutral
    narrator. His voice alternates with present-tense narration by each
    of the three children (sometimes in dialogue with other characters),
    a structure both dramatic and musical. It's easy to imagine a high
    school putting the book onstage, in John Brown's Body fashion.

    Roughly half the novel takes place in the build-up to the massacres,
    giving Walrath time to establish both the historical and cultural
    context and each speaker's distinctive style and motivation. While
    Sosi feels strong ties to her family's ancestral mill and vineyard --
    and hopes to marry the boy next door -- Shahen dreams of emigration,
    poring over letters from his uncle in America. He's also the first
    in the family to heed the coming danger, warning his father that
    "pogroms / will come again."

    But even as their neighbors flee Armenia, the Donabedians stay put.

    Accustomed to living in a multicultural setting, Papa harbors a tragic
    faith that reason and humanity will nip ethnic persecution in the bud.

    "There is no them, / only single souls," he tells his family, when
    his wife wonders if they can trust the Turks to be reasonable. And
    the Muslims he knows personally, like his Turkish musician friend
    and his Kurdish son-in-law, "would never harm us. / This is our home."

    It's an enlightened attitude for which the father will pay with his
    life and others', leaving his son angry and unforgiving as he leads
    his sisters from their burning village into the mountains. Walrath
    handles that clash of attitudes with great sensitivity, using Papa's
    beloved music -- which embodies his dream of diverse elements working
    in harmony -- as a way to reconcile Shahen to his memory.

    Music also links the family to the eagle and his world: Sosi has
    retrieved the bird's fallen quill for her father to use to pluck his
    oud. The feather becomes one of three talismans the children carry with
    them on their grueling, 63-day journey to relative safety in Aleppo.

    Free verse proves a surprisingly apt format for the story. While
    long-form verse narratives are almost unknown in today's adult
    literature, they've carved out a place in children's fiction as a
    way to lure in reluctant readers (all that white space!). Verse
    is particularly apropos here, because, as Walrath argues in her
    author's note, "Everyday language cannot express the scale and
    horror of genocide." Confronted with the full, hideous tableaux,
    "we all turn away," able to absorb them only "in fragments."

    Those "fragments" are the building blocks of a story in which the
    unsaid can be as powerful as the said. Walrath uses Mariam's terse
    child's voice as a counterpoint to her siblings' more articulate
    perspectives. Her sections are more concrete and less lyrical than
    theirs, but often more devastating. Take her description of preparing
    to cross the Euphrates, which is piled high with reeking corpses:

    Down to the river,

    to summer.

    This summer smells bad.

    Rocks scrape my legs.

    I hope Mama's there.

    Walrath has already spelled out the ugly details of the children's
    mother's death for the teen or adult reader (the book carries a
    "14-plus" label), yet she persuasively conveys the innocence that
    refuses to accept such realities. Together with the eagle's overarching
    perspective -- his power of flight gives him a wider lens -- the
    disparate pieces come together in a picture of rare force. We learn
    here not only of the Armenian lives lost in 1915, but also of a way
    of life nearly destroyed. Walrath lovingly describes life in Palu:
    ripening apricots, beetles crushed to make carpet dye, celebrations
    with "the black pot filled with green-pepper dolma."

    That pot, still filled with food crafted by their mother, is
    one of the three objects the children carry on their seemingly
    impossible journey. Their pilgrimage combines the brutality of fact,
    the sophistication of adult literature and the strangeness of a fairy
    tale, sucking in readers who might generally avoid "issue" books.

    Finding silent music in her stark story, Walrath contributes with her
    own eloquence to keeping the past alive -- as both elegy and warning
    to the present.

    Extended Excerpt From Like Water on Stone

    Ardziv

    As olives turned

    from green to black

    and warbler's second brood

    hatched and fledged, I watched.

    Shahen showed Mariam

    new words for her stick.

    Each day she scratched

    long lines of letters

    into the earth,

    leading like paths

    in rings around the mill.

    She wrote his name.

    Shahen.

    Wave and smile to the side.

    Smile, smile, half smile.

    Stick, small snake.

    Swan down, half smile, stick.

    Smile, swan down, smile.

    Shahen.

    In distant lands

    lines of soldiers

    moved locust-like

    across the earth,

    their bodies clad

    in identical

    greens and browns,

    rifles up like antennae.

    The original print version of this article was headlined "Speaking
    the Unspeakable"

    http://www.sevendaysvt.com/vermont/book-review-like-water-on-stone-by-dana-walrath/Content?oid=2475208

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