IN
Mark Arax is the author of In My Father's Name, a Simon & Schuster book.
Peter H. King "Columnist, "Los Angeles Times" Almost every American
town harbors some brutal secret, but few produce writers like Mark
Arax with both the courage and artistic talent needed to coax the
story out and shape it into fine literature. Of course, Arax had an
extra incentive: the footsteps he followed ran straight through his
own family, straight through his own heart.
Wil Haygood "Author of "King Of The Cats: The Life And Times Of
Adam Clayton Powell, Jr." A brave and chilling story...You won't
forget the landscape rendered in this book, nor the ache of family
lore. And certainly not Arax's beautiful and cleareyed writing that
enables him to reclaim his father's lost honor.
In 1972, Arax's father, Ara, was killed by two shooters at his Fresno nightclub, when Mark was 15; the murder was never solved. But the bond between father and son was especially strong, and Mark, who went on to become a journalist with the Los Angeles Times, struggled for years with his compulsion to solve it. Eventually, he moved back to his hometown for that purpose. This unusual, introspective memoir is the result. It reveals that the large Armenian American community in Fresno was made up of survivors of the 1915 Turkish massacre and their descendants, who fought against constant discrimination. Mark's father and his uncle built a chain of five groceries, which failed, and Ara then bought the nightclub, where drugs became an increasing problem. The idealistic and stubborn Ara came to know who the big drug dealers were. Determined to blow the whistle on them, he revealed his plans to some of the very policemen who were protecting them. The murder came soon after. Mark developed a clear idea of who the architects of the slaying were as well as insights into his father, other family members, the ``fetid town'' and, most important, himself. Although overlong, his book makes for absorbing reading. (Feb.)
Peter H. King "Columnist, "Los Angeles Times" Almost every American
town harbors some brutal secret, but few produce writers like Mark
Arax with both the courage and artistic talent needed to coax the
story out and shape it into fine literature. Of course, Arax had an
extra incentive: the footsteps he followed ran straight through his
own family, straight through his own heart.
Wil Haygood "Author of "King Of The Cats: The Life And Times Of
Adam Clayton Powell, Jr." A brave and chilling story...You won't
forget the landscape rendered in this book, nor the ache of family
lore. And certainly not Arax's beautiful and cleareyed writing that
enables him to reclaim his father's lost honor.
Ask a Question About this Product More... |