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Author Archives: Taline Voskeritchian
Rough beauty…
Apples are ordinary; strawberries and figs are explicit; pears are restrained, even hesitant. Watermelons, cantaloupes, and honeydew possess the self-consciousness of the corpulent. But the peach is in a class by itself. On an August afternoon, a peach or two … Continue reading
The Call of the Adriatic
~~From time to time, I post photographs from friends who are traveling to the world’s remote corners and bringing or sending back photographs. Today’s wayward photos and words are those of my daughter, Tamar, taken during our trip to Croatia … Continue reading
Posted in Cities and towns, Ordinary places, Rx for Maladies
Tagged Adriatic Sea, Dubrovnik, travel
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Awesome Plitvice, Croatia
“Take nothing but pictures, leave nothing but footprints, and use nothing but time.” These are the directives posted by UNESCO at the entrance to the trails and waterfalls that make up the Plitvice Lake Park in northern Croatia. The Park … Continue reading
Posted in Aging, well enough, Cities and towns, Small joys
Tagged Croatia, Hiking, Plitvice, travel, UNESCO world hesitage site
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In Split, Croatia
~~My friend and colleague A.S. wrote today from Yerevan: “We all live for great food, great stories (to be encountered during our journeys anywhere), and great conversations,” all of which converge when we travel. The story of the day for … Continue reading
Posted in Cities and towns, Rx for Maladies, Small joys
Tagged Anti-fascist day in Split, Croatia, Dubrovnik, Split, vishné liquor
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At Oscar Wilde’s Grave
Originally posted on Passages Home Blog:
The grave of Oscar Wilde, Pere Lachaise Cemetery, Paris On this hot, humid day, with the possibility of a storm lurking not too far, we–Bob and I–made it to the Pere Lachaise Cemetery. After…
The Valise–a family memoir
~~”The Valise” was published in the fall 2011 issue of American Literary Review. Since then, the publication has gone digital, and the essay is not available in print or on the ALR website. You can read it … Continue reading
Posted in Armenians, Cities and towns, Languages and readings, Ordinary places, Palestinians, Those we Love
Tagged Abdelrahman Munif, American Literary Review, Amman, Araxi Oshagan, Armenian Genocide, Armenians, Boursa, Erzurum, expulsion from Palestine, Family chronicle, family memoir, Hagop Oshagan, Jerusalem, Mnatsortats, refugees, Remnants (Mnatsortats), western Armenian literature
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Final notes on “The Promise”
~~In The Promise, the Armenian genocide has at last been made into a big, feature-length movie with huge ambitions: to join the company of Lawrence of Arabia, Doctor Zhivago and Titanic. Such a Hollywood epic, the argument goes, would raise … Continue reading
Posted in Armenians
Tagged Armenian Genocide, genocide films, representations of the genocide, The Promise
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“The Three Complaints of My Mother” in “Solstice”
~~An essay of mine, “The Three Complaints of My Mother,” is in the Spring issue of “Solstice.” It took almost a decade to find a literary home for this essay, despite all the praise heaped on it by editors many … Continue reading
Mothers’ Day for all seasons…
Originally posted on Passages Home Blog:
At my local grocery this morning, the flower scene was in full bloom, so to speak. Flowers everywhere–tossed on the check out counter, held by shoppers, pinned on chests. So many flowers, in…
In the Balkans 2: Montenegro
Originally posted on Passages Home Blog:
Montenegro–from Asbed Kotchikian’s photos of his travels through the Balkans. Kotor ? Budva