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Book Info

978-1-84659-075-7
Fiction
October 2009
Paperback
13 x 20 cm
270 pages
£8.99

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About the Author
Agop J. Hacikyan is a Canadian academic and writer of Armenian descent. He is the author of several books on literature and linguistics as well as five novels, including A Summer Without Dawn, an international bestseller. He has resided in Montreal since 1957.

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The Lamppost Diary

Agop J. Hacikyan

lamppost.jpg


For young Tomas, nothing in Istanbul is certain, except perhaps the lamppost at the end of his street that he touches every day for luck on his way to school.

WWII rages, the spectre of the Armenian genocide haunts his parents and he is unsure of the affections of his neighbour Anya, the daughter of White Russian
émigrés. Anya and Tomas fall in love. Ten years on, Anya is in the US studying medicine while Tomas tries to scrape enough money together to join her. He becomes the editor of a new literary magazine, and things seem to be going his way until one of his writers is brutally murdered, apparently because of a story Tomas has published.

Can Tomas flee the country and rejoin Anya before getting caught up in the murder investigation?


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Reviews
'An epic which shows that events will always create their own momentum, that atrocities, even if brushed under the carpet and condemned to oblivion, will invariably surface and cry out ... The characters are masterfully drawn and elicit immense empathy from the reader.'
Moris Farhi

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Excerpts
Tomas was runing full speed. He was late for school. He stopped when he reached the rusty lamppost at the end of the street. He dropped his school bag onto the pavement, touched the metal pillar with his left hand, circled it three times, picked up the mud-smudged school bag once again and galloped off faster than before.

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