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Book Review: 'The Sandcastle Girls' By Chris Bohjalian

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  • Book Review: 'The Sandcastle Girls' By Chris Bohjalian

    'THE SANDCASTLE GIRLS' BY CHRIS BOHJALIAN

    Boston Globe
    http://articles.boston.com/2012-07-17/books/32683143_1_armenian-genocide-ottoman-empire-aleppo
    July 17 2012
    MA

    The year 2015 will mark the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide,
    and it is likely that Chris Bohjalian's newest novel, "The Sandcastle
    Girls," will represent just the beginning of what will be a steady
    stream of publications remembering this tragedy. Unlike his mystery
    books, this one is a historical romance, but the cool and lucid tone
    infusing it is unmistakably Bohjalian's.

    Laura is a writer and mother of two, and granddaughter of Elizabeth
    and Armen Petrosian. She has happy memories of her visits to her
    grandparents' comfortable Long Island home, with its "plush Oriental
    carpets, and thick leather books filled with an alphabet I could not
    begin to decipher," and the perpetual aroma of the lamb chops her
    grandfather ate for breakfast. But she has always been struck by the
    "relentless formality" of the house, and decides to research what may
    have fed the "subterranean currents of loss" she invariably sensed
    in her grandparents' presence.

    Her quest takes her, and us, back to 1915, when the rulers of the
    Ottoman Empire used World War I as an opportunity to exterminate
    the Armenian minority, whom they feared might ally itself with the
    Russians. Many Armenians were outright massacred; many more were
    exiled on forced death marches through the desert.

    It is at the end of one such march, in the Syrian city of Aleppo, that
    Laura's grandparents meet. There, on behalf of the Friends of Armenia,
    Boston banker Silas Endicott has come with his daughter, Elizabeth,
    to deliver humanitarian assistance. As the US consul escorts them to
    their quarters, the Endicotts get their first glimpse of the human
    calamity they have gamely, if naively, come to address.

    A line of women staggers into the town square. "All are beyond modesty,
    beyond caring. Their skin has been seared black by the sun or stained
    by the soil in which they have slept or, in some cases, by great
    yawning scabs and wounds that are open and festering. . . . The women
    look like dying wild animals as they lurch forward, some holding on
    to the walls of the stone houses to remain erect. . . . Their breasts
    are lost to their ribs. The bones of their hips protrude like baskets."

    That detailed, clinical language works to great effect. Bohjalian
    succeeds in depicting the horror, without sentimentalizing it,
    using photographs as one of the book's major plot devices. Shooting
    images of the dead and dying Armenians are two German soldiers,
    whose government is allied with the Ottoman Empire.


    From: Baghdasarian
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