When I decided that it was time to write
a novel about the genocide — what my novel's narrator calls glibly, «The Slaughter You Know Next to Nothing About» — I found myself focused on children and food.
In Like Water on Stone, my verse
novel about genocide and survival, the reader gets to know one of the world's oldest places: Armenia.
Not exact matches
I recently read two
novels of witness — both
about the Cambodian
genocide — that pulled me exquisitely into the lives of the characters to the point that I could barely breathe as I read, travelling down into the depths of both the terrors and the moments of joy.
Based on a true story, this powerful historical
novel tells
about the Turkish
genocide of the Armenians.
Books
about the Cambodian
Genocide I have never read a novel about Cambodia's genocide but I am of an age that I remember the news saying that Cambodia would fall when we left
Genocide I have never read a
novel about Cambodia's
genocide but I am of an age that I remember the news saying that Cambodia would fall when we left
genocide but I am of an age that I remember the news saying that Cambodia would fall when we left Vietnam.
The
novel has been gestating at the very least since 1992, when I first tried to make sense of the Armenian
Genocide: a slaughter that most of the world knows next to nothing
about.