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  • Budding novelists ready to bloom

    Rocky Mountain News, CO
    Dec 7 2007


    Budding novelists ready to bloom


    By Patti Thorn, Rocky Mountain News

    New novelists looking for attention might as well be asking for rain
    in the midst of a drought. There are always far more titles than
    spots available in the newspapers and magazines that might publicize
    them.

    That, alas, leaves many great works withering on the vine.

    So today, just call us the rainmaker, as we shower attention on some
    of the best titles of 2007 you may have missed.

    To bring you our annual great debuts issue, seven critics volunteered
    to read first novels all year long by authors whose works weren't
    reviewed in the regular books pages. They screened more books than
    ever before - nearly 100 titles (97 to be exact), stories of all
    plots and prose styles.

    Here, you'll find 10 of their favorites. For 15 more, we urge you to
    go to RockyMountainNews.com, where we hope some amazing new reading
    relationships will bloom.

    [parts omitted]


    Skylark Farm

    By Antonia Arslan (Knopf, 288 pages, $23.95)

    * Author's background: Arslan, who lives in Italy, has a degree in
    archaeology, teaches at the University of Padua and has drawn on the
    story of her own family for her novel.

    * Plot in a nutshell: The human faces of genocide leap poignantly
    from the pages of this gripping story as Arslan writes of Turkey's
    systematic attempt to exterminate all Armenians in 1915. The story
    follows the gentle pharmacist Sempad, as well as his wife and
    children, from the days of their placid life in an Armenian community
    through the rumors and suspicions about political alliances to their
    final days when all males were savagely butchered and females abused
    and sent to desert exile.

    * Sample of prose: "The night is over, and no trace of the men. None
    of these families will see them again. Many years later, with the
    Armenian passion and the world war both at an end, the fate of the
    men will be discovered: forced in the night to leave the Walt
    Warehouse, where they were killed one after the other in Falls
    Valley, where their unburied corpses were left staring at the sky,
    their eye sockets empty, naked and stripped of everything, even the
    majesty of death."

    * Author reminds me of: Micheline Marcom, whose Three Apples Fell
    >From Heaven is another story of the Armenian tragedy told in similar
    spare but evocative prose.

    * Best reason to read: This soul-wrenching novel about man's
    inhumanity to man is all the more powerful because of Geoffrey
    Brock's sensitive translation of Arslan's tightly controlled, vivid
    prose.

    For complete list of the books
    http://www.rockymountainnews.com/news/2007/d ec/07/budding-novelists-ready-to-bloom/
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