A Child of the Orient
About This Book
The narrator recalls her childhood as a Greek-speaking girl raised by a fervently nationalist uncle on an island in the Sea of Marmara, torn between patriotic instruction and close bonds with Turkish companions. Episodes trace family lore of past uprisings, encounters with neighbors and servants, personal hardships including being sold and wandering, and a gallery of vivid women and men from urban and rural life. Later chapters follow travel to America and eventual return, while recurring themes examine cultural conflict, religious difference, gender expectations, and the persistence of personal and communal memory.