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From tolerance to hatred in a crumbling empire

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  • From tolerance to hatred in a crumbling empire

    The Virginian-Pilot(Norfolk, Va.)
    December 5, 2004 Sunday The Virginian-Pilot Edition

    >From tolerance to hatred in a crumbling empire


    BIRDS WITHOUT WINGS
    LOUIS De BERNIERES
    Knopf. 554 Pages. $25.95.

    By RAY LOCKER


    THE FIRST SIGN that life in the village of Eskibahce wasn't as
    tranquil as it seemed came when its residents dragged the wife of its
    leading citizen into the town square and tried to stone her to death
    for adultery.

    A few weeks later, they stood by when the local drunk assaulted the
    town's Armenian shopkeeper, all the while shouting ethnic slurs at
    him.

    In "Birds Without Wings," author Louis de Bernieres, whose previous
    novel was the best seller "Corelli's Mandolin," has used this town on
    the coast of the Mediterranean Sea as the setting for his account of
    the final days of the Ottoman Empire and the upheaval that
    accompanied the creation of modern Turkey. He shows how easily people
    can cross the delicate line between diversity and tolerance to casual
    cruelty and rabid hatred when prodded by the twin evils of
    nationalism and religious intolerance.

    Here, de Bernieres is working familiar territory, often too familiar.
    His books deal with ordinary people pushed by currents unleashed by
    crackpots and misguided visionaries, be they communist
    revolutionaries, fascist dictators or fanatic nationalists.

    His first three novels, a trilogy about the Andean village of
    Cochadebajo, channeled the magical realism of Gabriel Garcia Marquez,
    while "Corelli's Mandolin" bared the soul of the Greek island of
    Cephalonia during its occupation by German and Italian invaders in
    World War II. All showed people trying to keep their lives together
    while the zealots around them exploited human differences for their
    own gain.

    A sort of prequel to "Corelli's Mandolin" - the books share some
    common characters - "Birds Without Wings" is set in the crumbling,
    polyglot Ottoman Empire. The Muslims, Greek Christians and Armenians
    of Eskibahce live in peace, aware of their differences but content to
    either gloss over or accommodate them without outside agitation.

    But, as it always does in de Bernieres' novels, war stirs the
    village's inner demons. Young Muslim men are drafted, while their
    Christian neighbors are shunted aside. The town's Armenians are
    forced from their homes and driven east on a genocidal death march.
    The empire's Muslim rulers peddle a shallow jihad to keep their
    power, stripping away what had been a shared sense of nationhood and
    community and stirring what de Bernieres calls "the hell's broth of
    religious and nationalist hatred."

    As a result, thousands of Ottoman soldiers, as well as those from
    Britain, France, Australia and New Zealand, died in the trenches at
    Gallipoli, one of the war's most violent and senseless battles. Here,
    de Bernieres writes powerfully of the savagery of war, as soldiers
    die almost as often from the disease of the battlefield as from being
    shot, bombed or gassed.

    Unfortunately, de Bernieres' powerful prose serves a book that reads
    almost more like a history than a novel. Unlike "Corelli's Mandolin,
    which was supported by a long-running love story, "Birds Without
    Wings" has many different stories but little that pulls them
    together. De Bernieres has said he writes his novels in pieces and
    then puts them together later. Here, some of the pieces must have
    fallen on the floor during construction.

    That lack of focus ultimately keeps "Birds Without Wings" from
    reaching his usual high standard. At times, he also seems to repeat
    himself: "Corelli's Mandolin" had an Italian officer who liked music;
    so does "Birds Without Wings."

    De Bernieres tells all of this with the rich prose and vivid
    descriptions that are his gift, but he often uses them to push a
    story we keep thinking will get somewhere but never quite does.
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