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Tallahassee Commissioner's Novel Attracts Literary Interest

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  • Tallahassee Commissioner's Novel Attracts Literary Interest

    TALLAHASSEE COMMISSIONER'S NOVEL ATTRACTS LITERARY INTEREST
    By Julian Pecquet

    Tallahassee Democrat
    http://www.tallahassee.com/apps/pbcs.dll/ article?AID=/20080519/NEWS01/805190320/1010
    May 19 2008
    FL

    When he wasn't busy practicing law or boning up on local government
    issues, Tallahassee City Commissioner Mark Mustian spent the past
    three years exploring his family's Armenian roots.

    The result: A new novel, "The Gendarme," that has caught the eye of
    publishers around the world.

    The story focuses on a retired Turkish policeman who moves to
    America and, in his old age, remembers his role in deporting Armenian
    Christians to Syria during the waning days of the Ottoman Empire.

    Over the past couple of months, the manuscript has been placed with
    G. P. Putnam's Sons, a division of Penguin Group (USA), which has
    sold the rights in six foreign countries -- Italy, Israel, Brazil,
    France, Spain and Greece. It's expected to be available by next year.

    Mustian credits his topic's controversy for the interest it's getting
    abroad.

    It's a crime in Turkey to identify the death of an estimated 1.5
    million Armenians during World War I as genocide. Last year, when
    a U.S. House committee did so, the Turkish government recalled its
    ambassador to Washington and threatened to withdraw its support for
    the war in Iraq.

    Mustian said he got interested in the topic because he'd read
    survivors' tales, but had never seen anything written from the other
    point of view. He has never been to Turkey, and complemented his
    library research by asking for help from Turkish students at Florida
    State University. But the first student who answered his ad soon
    returned the manuscript.

    "It was kind of an eye opener that the first person who said they'd do
    it, brought the book back the next day and said 'No, I can't do it',"
    Mustian said.

    This is Mustian's second novel. His first, "The Return," told the
    story of a Brazilian woman claiming to be Christ reborn. It was
    published by Pineapple Press in May 2000.

    Paul Shepherd, a writer in residence at Florida State University who
    teaches creative writing, praised the new book.

    "There are probably two things that in my mind go into a really
    excellent novel: a gripping story and a character that really
    comes alive," said Shepherd, a fellow church member of Mustian's at
    St. Stephen Lutheran Church.

    "The guy is a really complex character -- your feelings for him are
    challenged as you read the book." Shepherd said. "I found myself
    months after I read the book thinking of this guy's actions. He's an
    incredibly compelling character."
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