Posted May 12, 2007
6:00 AM
(WTNH) _ Author Margaret Ajemain Ahnert joins Good Morning Connecticut Weekend to talk about her new book, The Knock at the Door.
Information provided by our guest
About the book:
In 1915, Armenian Christians in Turkey were forced to convert to Islam, barred from speaking their language, and often driven out of their homes as the Turkish army embarked on a widespread campaign of intimidation and murder. More than one million Armenians lost their lives in what came to be known as the first horrendous genocide of the twentieth century.
While historical documents abound, first-time author Margaret Ajemian Ahnert goes beyond the statistics and takes us on a personal journey in her new book The Knock at the Door, a skillful retelling of her mother's traumatic battle to survive as a young girl coming of age in this period of brutality and hatred.
At age 15, Ahnert's mother Ester was separated from her foster family during a forced march away from her birth town of Amasia, narrowly avoided kidnapping, faced unspeakable horrors at the hands of soldiers, and was forcibly married to an abusive Turkish wagon driver. From her room in an Armenian old age home in Queens, NY and with Margaret as her scribe, Ester recounts in vivid detail the years-long journey from her once-happy life in Amasia to the shores of America.
In retelling her 98-year-old mother's story - the good times and the bad - Ahnert leaves her own imprint on the work, plumbing the depths of her own relationship with Ester in alternating chapters and incorporating Ester's story into one of a mother and a daughter.
About the Author:
Margaret Ahnert was born in New York City. She received an MFA from Goucher College and a BA from Goddard College, and is a graduate of the Barnes Foundation. She has pursued a variety of careers including producing television documentaries, running a Pennsylvania hotel and resort, lecturing as a docent at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and teaching art appreciation through the "Art Goes to School" program in elementary schools. Ahnert holds a 100-ton master captain's license and is an avid hunter and fisherwoman. She is the mother of two grown children and two grandchildren.
For more information, please visit www.margaretahnert.com
Advance Praise:
“A frank and searing testimony.” Publishers Weekly
“A rewarding and intriguing read. You will not be disappointed.” Armenian Weekly Review
“The Knock at the Door is an inspired, beautifully written chronicle of one of the worst eras in human history. Had such books been written long ago, another Holocaust, which followed 25 years later, might never have happened.”
Robert Morgenthau, District Attorney for New York County, grandson of Henry Morgenthau, Sr., United States Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire during World War I
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