
ISBN: 9780982359402
Poetry | 6″x8″, 120 pp., paperback | October 2009
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Praise for Alan Semerdjian’s In the Architecture of Bone
In the Architecture of Bone is the spirit of Armenia streaming through the mnemonic of Semerdjian’s family and their abode. This “evidence” exists by means of its words inscribed on a blank beatific hide. And this hide co-respirates as a biography of exile while lingering in the cells of language. Scenic registrations, interior postings via a vivid singularity. Semerdjian condenses the “undertow” and the droning of the Armenian Diaspora through a stark imaginal thriving. In the Architecture of Bone is a book brimming with marvelous seepage and recollection.
—Will Alexander
Alan Semerdjian’s In the Architecture of Bone reads like a long poem cycle that pulls the reader into an open field in which Semerdjian weaves his explorations of language and art, Armenian history and family. These dynamic poems mingle the ghosts of the past with the pace of contemporary life. This talented, young poet is well worth your reading.
—Peter Balakian
In search of “a dare of home,” Alan Semerdjian confronts the structure of Armenian memory as located within genocide and genetics. Laying out an assemblage of cultural fragments interpreted through the politics of art and custom and nation and family, In the Architecture of Bone constitutes the poet’s visual exploration of how an “only child” navigates a landscape littered with a burdensome history’s “one of everything.”
—Erin McKnight, Prick of the Spindle
“The Armenian genocide is not taught in the U.S.’s public schools. . . . and not all nations even recognize that it happened. With the exception of Damad Ferit Pasha’s brief postwar government, no Turkish regime has ever acknowledged the genocide. Indeed, the topic is currently a barrier to Turkey’s bid to enter the European Union. . . . I offer this long preamble to my review of Alan Semerdjian’s excellent poetry collection, In the Architecture of Bone, chiefly because of this widespread ignorance and because this book cannot be understood if the reader is unfamiliar, even in passing, with this early modern genocide. Semerdjian’s poetry is, first and foremost, that of the Armenian Diaspora, which still viscerally experiences the aftershocks of this genocide several generations later not only through displacement, but also through the memories that friends, grandparents, and great-grandparents have passed down. . . .
—JoSelle Vanderhooft, Pedestal Magazine
“If a culture could be recreated with words, Alan Semerdjian has built a veritable microcosm of the Armenian lifestyle in his most recent poetry collection, In The Architecture of Bone. . . . an anthropological look at the psychological difficulties his immigrant elders faced after they arrived in America, specifically, their adjustment to suburban life after escaping ethnic cleansing. . . . Semerdjian masterfully reproduces the process of how these memories are suppressed in ‘The Grandchildren of Genocide,’ but in describing the process of suppression he uncovers the worst memories. . . . In acknowledging the sheer stroke of luck his grandfather had in the face of horror, Semerdjian makes In The Architecture of Bone a tribute to all of the people who suffered because of their ethnicity and applauds the strength of those who continued in their traditions in spite of being cut off from their home lands.”
—K.T. Mitchell, Adirondack Review
For those of us who are prepared to “Go Deep” into the architecture of the individual human experience rather than skim its surfaces, there’s good news. As revealed by Armenian-American poet and musician Alan Semerdjian, there is much that is “bone deep” in his book The Architecture Of Bone. . . .”
—George Wallace, Long Island Pulse
In Architecture a fragmented world achieves cohesion. Rather than made into a terrifying place, the tragedy transforms into a celebration of “the idea of family” invoked in the dedication. The grandfather “paints to elevate/everything flattened and dry.” The grandson, on the other hand, sings songs which illuminate the mother’s need for “the safety/of home, the hallway, a life/next door to her mother/and father”and, why not, “The shackles of my mother/and all Armenian women” around their sons. Semerdjian fulfills the promise of the epigraph, “Perhaps it is our function to illuminate some dark corner of the universe” (Gostan Zarian). His poems do indeed deepen our understanding of our own experiences. “Typically, I should know more/than a few words–most Turks know a little/Armenian; most Armenians know a lot of/Turkish–but I wasn’t born there” is a poignant reminder–because so sudden–of the disruption caused by one’s removal from one’s roots.
—Arpi Sarafian, Armenian Observer
About Alan Semerdjian
Writer/musician Alan Semerdjian’s poems and essays have appeared in several print and online publications and anthologies including Chain, The Lyric Review, Adbusters, Arson, Ararat, and Diagram. He released a chapbook of poems called “An Improvised Device” (Lock n Load Press) in 2005. His songs have appeared in television and film and charted on CMJ. Alan has performed and read all over North America. He currently teaches at Herricks High School in New Hyde Park, NY and resides in New York City’s East Village. You can visit Alan’s website at alanarts.com
Readings & Events
(reverse chronological order)
31 July 2011: NYC
The First Annual New York Poetry Festival
(with Nancy Agabian and Lola Koundakjian)
1:00pm, at the second stage
Governors Island, NYC
tpsny.org
5 July 2011: NYC
7 pm @ The Bowery Poetry Club
w/Michael Klein & Alan Semerdjian
308 Bowery (Between Houston and Bleecker)
F train to 2nd Ave, 6 to Bleecker
212-614-0505
26 February 2011: New York, NY
The Smalls Poetry Feature – Hosted by Lee Kostrinsky
with Sarah Sarai and Alan Semerdjian
5pm – 7pm
183 W. 10th Street (@7th Avenue)
18 September 2010: New York, NY
Pedestal Magazine Poetry Reading
7pm @ KGB Bar
85 East 4th Street
(212) 505-3360
kgbbar.com
8 August 2010: Cambridge, MA
4pm @ The Longfellow National Historic Site
with Susan Donnelly and Ellen Steinbaum
105 Brattle Street
nps.gov/long/
5 June 2010: Locust Valley, NY
2 PM @ Locust Valley Library
170 Buckram Road
(516-671-1837)
Open Mic follows
21 May 2010: Kingston, PA
Third Friday Series at Paper Kite Press
6pm
wordpainting.com/3rd-friday.shtml
15 May 2010: Glendale, CA
8 PM @ Abril Books
415 East Broadway
(818) 243-4112
2 April 2010: New York, NY
7-10pm @ Bowery Poetry Club
Co-sponsored by GARTAL and The Armenian Poetry Project
308 Bowery
Facebook
20 March 2010: Kingston, NY
Cadmium Text Series
2pm @ The Gallery at R&F Handmade Paints
84 Ten Broeck Avenue
A $5 donation is suggested.
4 February 2010: New York, NY
7pm @ The Zohrab Center
Accompanied by Maureen Keenan (flute)
Free. Refreshments.
St. Vartan Cathedral
630 Second Avenue
2 December 2009: New York, NY
Hyphenated American Poetry &
Alan Semerdjian NYC Book Release
Harbor Mountain Press / GenPop Consortium poets Elena Georgiou and Mario Susko will join Alan Semerdjian for an evening of “hyphenated American poetry.”
6:00 PM @ The Bowery Poetry Club
$6
14 November 2009: Huntington, NY
Alan Semerdjian reading & signing In the Architecture of Bone
@ Book Revue
313 New York Avenue
631-271-1442
6 November 2009: Amityville, NY
Peacesmiths: Topical, A-Typical, Folk Music, Poetry and Whatever Coffeehouse
Poetry by Alan Semerdjian & Maxwell Wheat. Music by Sonny Meadows & Bob Westcott.
8pm @ First United Methodist Church
25 Broadway Ave
(Southmost end of RT 110 near Merrick Road/Montauk Highway.)
$7 includes light refreshments
(631) 798-0778


