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Confessions of a Book Addict, 4

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  • Confessions of a Book Addict, 4

    Taunton Daily Gazette , MA
    Aug 14 2012

    Confessions of a Book Addict, 4

    By Kristina Fontes

    Title: The Sandcastle Girls
    Author: Chris Bohjalian
    Publisher: Doubleday, New York


    This post was delayed by a hectic week before vacation, and then the
    first three days of said vacation, which were spent in Vermont.
    Relevant because this article mentions Vermont! Also, and this is the
    truly exciting part: I was lucky enough to be able to interview Chris
    Bohjalian in person.

    So, at long last, let's get started.

    When I was younger, I didn't think all that much of my heritage. I
    just took it for granted. My entire family was Portuguese, and so was
    basically everyone else I knew. We were nothing special.

    Well, I know better now. I understand what it means to be a first
    generation American. My parents and grandparents gave up the only life
    they knew to come to the United States. They bravely sought something
    better. They learned a new language--and a tricky one at that, let's
    be honest. They adapted to a new culture, but in such a way as they
    have never lost touch with where they came from.

    Now that I'm grown, the best I can do is try to be the same way. To
    honor what's come before, as I and those I love move irrepressibly
    forward.

    The Sandcastle Girls features a narrator who experiences a change of
    heart herself. In learning her grandparents' story, Laura discovers so
    much more about her heritage, and for the first time in her life is
    truly moved by it. She is a second-generation Armenian-American, and
    her grandparents, Armen and Elizabeth, had lived through the Armenian
    genocide of World War I.

    The book centers around Armen and Elizabeth's love story, from when
    they meet in the city of Aleppo and how each of them are affected by
    this dark time in human history. He has lost his wife and child: they
    survived the initial slaughters, but their fate is obvious when
    neither shows up in Aleppo after the awful Death March. Elizabeth is
    in Aleppo to make a difference, despite the horrors that quickly
    threaten to overwhelm her.

    What makes this book so engrossing, really, isn't the love story
    (although that's pretty great): it's the history. The details are
    vivid, striking; you will be able to picture Aleppo immediately.

    You will also be able to see the women who were the victims of these
    Death Marches across the desert. Not many people have heard of the
    Armenian Genocide during the course of their schooling. All we were
    given when our history classes covered WWI was more information than
    we'd ever need to know about Archduke Ferdinand.

    If you read this book, I can assure you that you will be astounded
    that we never turned our attentions from the Archduke in the wake of
    such a tragic chapter in world history.

    I'm also very happy to admit that I was able to meet with Chris
    Bohjalian, and to talk about this book and his work. As a lifelong and
    self-styled nerd, it was one of my prouder moments. And, I got to
    bring my mom. Because who else would you bring to meet a bestselling
    novelist? The answer to that question should always be "Mom!"

    We started, naturally, with what it was that inspired him to write The
    Sandcastle Girls. It was, of course, based mostly on the desire to
    make more people aware of what happened to the Armenians in 1915. What
    followed was a list that, if people would ever behave as they ought to
    one another, would thankfully never exist:

    "The Armenian genocide, the Holocaust, Cambodia, Rwanda, Darfur;
    they're all linked."

    One wonders what would happen if everyone truly would learn fron
    history. One of the simultaneous beauties and shortcomings of the
    human race, though, is our capacity to forget. Sometimes, that's a
    good thing. But there are other times that this very tendency dooms us
    to repeat things that should never have happened in the first place.

    Bohjalian went on to call this "The Slaughter You Know Next to Nothing
    About. By 1939, it had disappeared into history."

    No offense to Archduke Ferdinand, but I think the deahts of 1.5
    million people are far more important that his assassination by the
    Black Hand. Tough break, Franz.

    As important as the subject matter is, this book was still a long time
    in the making. After initial unsuccess, the project was shelved for
    some time. Then, Bohjalian happened to have a coffee with an old
    friend, who got the wheels in motion with just one question: "When are
    we going to try again?"

    Much like his narrator Laura, Bohjalian didn't know all that much of
    his heritage growing up. His father was a first generation
    Armenian-American, and his grandparents were survivors of the
    genocide. They had "a wonderfully exotic house in a New York City
    suburb," quite like Laura's grandparents and their Ottoman Annex.

    Bohjalian's father "wanted to be as American as possible" though. He
    "only spoke Armenian when teasing or bickering with his parents."

    That was unfortunate, as it certainly meant a lot more digging when it
    came to researching this book. Not to mention the personal cost of
    missing an entire volume of one's family history. Consequently, when
    it comes to knowing his cultural roots, Bohjalian reflects that his
    heritage's "importance has grown profoundly."

    Should anyone be interested in learning more, there is the Armenian
    Library and Museum of America in Watertown. It hosts a "wonderful
    collection of not just Armenian history, but American history. All of
    the artifacts are important."

    Being a hopeful writer myself, and currently victim to the whims of a
    cranky manuscript, I couldn't resist a few "writer" questions.

    Like many of us scribes, Bohjalian always knew on some level that he
    wanted to write. He's been quite successful at it too, but it was
    heartening to learn that he received about 250 rejection slips before
    he sold a single work.

    Dedication won the day, thankfully.

    Throughout our conversation, I couldn't help but think of Jane
    Austen's maxim: "Write what you know." It seemed that it was exactly
    what Bohjalian did with The Sandcastle Girls, and with a great deal of
    his other works.

    Living in a small town in Vermont has played a prominent role in his
    career. Of his thirteen other novels, eleven are set in Vermont and
    two are set in New Hampshire. His life is there, so why not his work?
    It's as he said: "I know in my heart I found my voice in Vermont."

    With The Sandcastle Girls, the locale is a world away from the Green
    Mountain State. However, no work of his has ever been so close to
    home. We get the sense that narrator and author are on a similar path
    to discovery. The novel becomes something more than itself.

    Bohjalian's final thought on that matter drove that thought home with
    me: "This is the most important book I will ever write."

    And he told me I could definitely quote him on that.

    http://www.tauntongazette.com/blogs/bookaddict/x1222024675/Confessions-of-a-Book-Addict-4

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