Back online!

I can’t believe it’s been so long since I posted here! My husband and I decided on the spur of the moment to take a holiday. We went to the Galapagos Islands. Fabulous trip! We met some wonderful people and we saw amazing landscapes and bizarre animals. Truly a trip of a lifetime.

While we were gone, our house was struck by lightning. Not much damage — thank goodness — but our internet was wiped out. We just got back online on Thursday evening. Right now I am tackling my bursting inbox.

I had a neat email from Rumi Musha in Japan. We have been corresponding for a number of years. She and her husband run a translation school and they have used portions of my various books in their teaching. Her husband just read Aram’s Choice and loved it. He wrote about it on his blog. How awesome is that?

Launch, June 29th

Marsha Skrypuch, Carl Georgian and Muriel Wood at the Freckled Lion Bookstore in Georgetown Ontario at the book launch for Aram’s Choice. Photo taken by Ted Brown of the Georgetown Independent Free Press.

Muriel is illustrator extraordinaire and Carl is the son of a Georgetown Boy. Aram’s Choice is dedicated to him because it was his father’s story that initially spurred me on to write all of my Armenian novels.

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Wonderful book launch!

Muriel Wood and I had a wonderful launch at Freckled Lion Bookstore in Georgetown on Thursday for Aram’s Choice.

There were two signing times — from 1 til 2 and from 7 til 8.

I met Muriel and her husband David at the former site of the Georgetown Boys’ Farm just before 11:30am so that Bonnie, the superintendant of Cedarvale Community Centre and park, could show us around. Bonnie was so very gracious. She let us wander around inside the building that used to be the Boys’ living area. We went through the top floor which was the dormitory, the kitchen, the former classrooms, everything. And then she kindly took us through her own home, which used to be where the housekeeper of the Georgetown Boys’ Farm lived. We got lots of photos. Muriel is in the process of doing the illustrations for Call Me Aram, which is the sequel to Aram’s Choice.

I got to Freckled Lion at about 12:30am and downed a protein bar for lunch. People began to arrive at around 12:45 and we had a steady stream until about 3! All of the Georgetown Boys themselves have died, but many family members came. Also, a number of my writer friends came, including Gillian Chan and her son Theo, as well as Elizabeth from the Books and Writers Forum, and Marina and Hélène from private kidcrit. Also, lian from TWUC and her mother Helen, who has written about one Georgetown Boy herself.

Many many Armenians came, including Carl Georgian, whose father’s story is the seed for all of my Armenian novels. Also Arsho Zakarian, who has helped both Muriel and myself in a thousand research ways. For the families of the Georgetown Boys, this signing was like a reunion. We heard many stories and shared laughter and tears.

We also found out where Stop 69 was! That was the radial railway stop for Georgetown and where the Boys got off the train. Muriel and I had guesstimated that it was about a mile from where it really was.

Sylvia Lesak, F&W publicist, was also there and she stayed until the evening. Then Tracey Dettman, marketing rep came and Sylvia left for home. We had lots of people come for the evening signing too, so we ended up staying until past 9pm.

Kate of Freckled Lion did a wonderful job of hosting this event. She had a huge tub of ice that was filled with all sorts of flavoured waters, and there was iced tea and hot coffee and all sorts of cookies and there were strawberries (not the saniflush kind!).

Georgetown itself is a nice place. It has a thriving downtown, friendly people and a country feel about it. And as for Freckled Lion, all I can say is I wish we had a bookstore like that in Brantford!

saniflush strawberries

Never again will I buy strawberries at the grocery store.

I generally buy them at the Farmers’ Market or at one of the roadside stands in the country but a few days ago I was having fresh strawberry withdrawal and I was in the supermarket and the produce guy was putting out fresh sparkling red strawberries.

I bought a carton and brought them home. As I cut off the stems, I noticed an odd smell — faintly strawberry-like, but perfumey. I rinsed them extra well, then popped a few in my mouth. They did not taste like strawberries at all. I have never tasted saniflush, but if I ever did, I am sure it would taste like those strawberries.

I put the carton in the fridge and meant to take them back to the store to complain, but didn’t get around to it. Days later, the strawberries looked just as new and unshrivelled as when I bought them.

I went to the Farmers’ Market today and bought myself some real strawberries. These ones are such a dark red that they’re nearly black. And some have bruises and soft spots. And they taste marvellous.

Georgetown book launch!!!

Aram’s Choice
By Marsha Skrypuch, Illustrated by Muriel Wood

Coming up to the anniversary of the “Georgetown Boys” arriving in Canada, we pay tribute to their journey through this beautifully illustrated children’s novel that touches on the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

Join author, Marsha Skrypuch and illustrator Muriel Wood, as they welcome the families of the original Georgetown Boys to the official launch of Aram’s Choice.

The launch will be held at:

The Freckled Lion, 87
Main St. S. in Georgetown, ON
June 29 th , 2006 from 1-2pm and 7-8pm

From the New Beginnings series, comes Aram’s Choice, a story that follows the life of a boy who loses his family in the Armenian genocide in Turkey and is exiled in Greece. The book follows Aram while he travels to Canada with forty-seven other Armenian boys in what was Canada’s first international humanitarian effort.

Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch first heard about the Armenian Genocide seventeen years ago while doing research for a magazine article about the first “Georgetown Boys” — a group of 47 Armenian orphans who were rescued by Canada in 1923 and were housed and schooled at a farm in Georgetown, Ontario.

After interviewing the son of a “Georgetown Boy,” Marsha was left with more questions than answers. For example, why were all of the rescued orphans male? Why were they all between the ages of eight and twelve? What happened to their parents? What happened to their sisters?

After years of research, Marsha was able to write Aram’s Choice. Based on true events, this book gives children a chance to learn about effects of genocide through one that the Turkish government has long denied ever happened.

Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch is the author of many books for children, including Silver Threads and Enough as well as her YA novels, The Hunger and Nobody’s Child, which was nominated for the Red Maple Award, the Alberta Rocky Mountain Book Award, and the B.C. Stellar Award.

Muriel Wood has been illustrating books for children since 1964, including the Canadian classic, The Olden Days Coat written by Margaret Laurence. Other books that she has illustrated include Old Bird, and the first two titles from the New Beginnings series, Lizzie’s Storm and Scared Sarah.

Aram’s Choice
By Marsha Skrypuch; Illustrated by Muriel Wood
Ages: 8-11, Grades: 3-6
ISBN: 1-55041-352-X hc; Price: $18.95 CAD
ISBN : 1-55041-354-6 pb; Price: $10.95 CAD
Available: June 29 th , 2006
Fitzhenry & Whiteside
195 Allstate Parkway  Markham, Ontario L3R 4T8
1.800.387.9776  www.fitzhenry.ca

Contact:
Sylvia Lesak,
Marketing & Publicity Coordinator
905-477-9700 x 212
slesak@fitzhenry.ca

Aram has landed!

I got a call from Sonya at Fitzhenry & Whiteside early yesterday morning to inform me that the shipment of Aram’s Choice has arrived! It is always touch and go with full colour illustrated books because they tend to be printed in Hong Kong rather than Canada. Even once they’re printed, it takes a long time for the ship to arrive, then pass through Customs, etc etc.

I am so relieved that the shipment has arrived. We have a book launch scheduled for Thursday June 29th at Freckled Lion Bookstore in Georgetown Ontario. Carl Georgian, who is the son of George Georgian (Kevork Kevorkian) — the Georgetown Boy whose story is the core of Aram’s Choice — emailed me to let me know that a couple of carloads of Georgetown Boy families will be coming down for the launch. It will be something of a reunion! I am so excited.

I think they will be blown away when they see Muriel Wood’s amazing paintings. It is an honour for me to be matched up with such a fabulous illustrator. Her paintings are near-photographic.

That said, I’ve been darned fortunate in the past too. Michael Martchenko has illustrated two of my picture books — and that was a dream come true for me. And Halina Below, illustrator for The Best Gifts, is also wonderful. It is always so neat for me to see what an illustrator’s imagination can paint with my words.

Kudos to our PM

I am delighted that Stephen Harper has formally apologized to Canadians of Chinese descent over the Head Tax issue.

And while that chapter in Canada’s history is grim, it got even worse in 1923 with the Chinese Exclusion Act, when Chinese immigrants were banned altogether from coming to Canada.

Ironically, 1923 was the same year that Canada’s Noble Experiment took place — our first international relief effort with the saving of 50 Armenian boys who were orphaned during the genocide in Turkey when 85% of the Armenians in Turkey were massacred. My book Aram’s Choice, is about these boys, who are now known as the Georgetown Boys.

And my friend Gillian Chan has written a fabulous novel about one girl and her family and how they were affected by the Chinese Exclusion Act, called An Ocean Apart.