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Aleppo. The setting is jarring. Skeletons, Starving, Staggering into Aleppo. Except this setting isn't modern day, it's WW I.
The Armenian genocide began April 24, 1915 with the roundup of Armenian intellectuals and leaders. Many were executed. Women, children, the elderly, and the infirm were marched through the Syrian Desert to Aleppo. This historical fiction is informational and gripping. "How do a million and a half people die with nobody knowing? … You kill them in the middle of nowhere." A ...more
The Armenian genocide began April 24, 1915 with the roundup of Armenian intellectuals and leaders. Many were executed. Women, children, the elderly, and the infirm were marched through the Syrian Desert to Aleppo. This historical fiction is informational and gripping. "How do a million and a half people die with nobody knowing? … You kill them in the middle of nowhere." A ...more

Elizabeth travels with her father from Boston to Aleppo, Syria to help the Armenians who are being forcibly removed from their homeland in Turkey during World War I, by bringing aid and medical supplies. She has attended college, taken a basic nursing course and has a narrow grasp of the language. Elizabeth quickly loses her naivete when a group of starved, naked women and children refugees are herded into the public square like animals. Where are the men, She asks? They have been slaughtered or
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Mar 04, 2020
Kemlo
rated it
it was ok
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review of another edition
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I have loved many books written by this author, but this one didn’t work for me. While I was interested in understanding the historical events, and I admire Bohjalian for tackling a subject as heartbreaking as the Armenian genocide (something I knew little about), I feel I would have been better off reading a nonfiction account. I’m not sure why, but I struggled to connect with any of the characters and rarely felt immersed in the story. I also had problems with the structure: the multiple threa
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UGH!! Do NOT demean genocide by putting an idiotic granddaughter/narrator who just HAS to tell us of the first boy she "F----d" and then HAS to explain why she choose to use the word "F_____d". And don't patronize me and tell me a woman facing death takes time to reflect on how being childless gave her a better sex life!! In 1915?? Maybe, it could have happened, but culturally was that something that would really have happened?? PLEASE STOP giving characters in historical novels modern-day opini
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This was really worth reading. Yes, the author did not shy away from describing the horrors of the Armenian genocide, and yes there were some pretty bad war scenes. But the overriding theme was people trying to do the right thing in very trying times, getting out of their comfort zone and making a difference. The fact that the author was Armenian made it even more powerful. Glad there are people like Elizabeth, Armen, Helmut, Nevart, the group of Bedouins, Sister Irmigard and Orhan. The message
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This was my first book by Chris Bohjalian, and it won't be my last. A beautiful and haunting book. This is why I love historical fiction.
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