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GPL to Host Writer/Activist Nancy Kricorian

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  • GPL to Host Writer/Activist Nancy Kricorian

    PRESS RELEASE
    Glendale Public Library
    222 East Harvard Street
    Glendale CA 91205
    Tel: 818-548-2030
    Web: http://www.glendalepubliclibrary.org/
    http://www.glendale.ci.ca.us/
    FB: www.facebook.com/GlendalePL


    Central Library to Host Writer/Activist Nancy Kricorian


    GLENDALE, CA on Wednesday March 20, 2013, writer/activist Nancy
    Kricorian will present her newly published book, All the Light there
    Was, followed by a discussion. The program will began at 7pm at the
    Glendale Central Library Auditorium, 222 East Harvard Street in
    Glendale. The presentation is in English. Admission is free; seating is
    limited. Library visitors receive 3 hours FREE parking across the street
    at The Market Place parking structure with validation at the Loan Desk.

    All the Light there Was, was Inspired by the life of resistance leader
    and Armenian Genocide survivor Missak Manouchian. Kricorian delved into
    the Armenian experience in Paris during World War II, interviewing
    survivors, including the last living member of Manouchian's team.
    Kricorian weaves her exhaustive historical research, her own Armenian
    heritage and her lifelong commitment to human rights causes into this
    beautiful and haunting tale. The story explores the Armenian immigrant
    experience through the eyes of a precocious young heroine,
    fourteen-year-old Maral lives with her family in Paris, like many others
    who survived the Armenian genocide in their homeland at the start of the
    Nazi occupation,

    Nancy Kricorian, author of the novels Zabelle and Dreams of Bread and
    Fire, is a widely published essayist and activist. After graduating from
    Dartmouth, Nancy studied and worked in Paris before earning an MFA in
    writing at Columbia University. As an activist, she is involved with
    CODEPINK: Women for Peace and the Occupy Wall Street Global Justice
    Working Group. She lives in New York City.

    "In order to create the characters in my novels, I collect stories. It's
    like being a collage artist, or maybe more like a bird building a nest
    with twigs, grasses, old feathers, bits of twine and other scraps. I
    find these stories in history books, memoirs, letters and documentary
    films. For all three of my novels so far, I have had the good fortune of
    talking with people who lived through the events that I am dramatizing
    in my fiction."

    The program is sponsored by the Library, Arts & Culture Department,
    Abril Books and the Friends of the Glendale Library.

    ###

    CONTACT: Elizabeth Grigorian, Glendale Library, Arts & Culture (818)
    548-3288

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