In a gathering of stories, Many Have Pictures Like This chronicles a familyโs history and passing, from Armenian villages before WWI to the Armenian Genocide, to Romania, and finally to the United States. Much is fictionalized, all is based on truth, and the author asks the question throughout: What is owed to oneโs dead?
Whether walking with his father to a pizzeria or sitting with his mother in an imagined coffee house, whether enjoying his grandmotherโs immigrant mac-and-cheese or playing catch with a friend on a hot New York day and encountering his godmother, the author learns what life demanded from his family. โI guess what Iโm most interested in,โ he says, โwhat I need to know, is how they continued on with their livesโwith their spirits intact to varying degreesโafter what theyโd endured by the circumstances of their origins and time and place.โ His own place as an immigrant and his familyโs expectations for him are in the mix. And thereโs the necessary acknowledgment that the monsters his family escaped never go away, not even in the New World.
Sometimes serious, sometimes playful, and with lessons learned from salmon and ravens in the authorโs attempt to flee his familyโs story, this collection is a mythology of a handful of people with experiences not entirely unique in the history of the world, though they were.
Carey Bagdassarian taught at William & Mary and, over the years, his work has taken him from science to interdisciplinary studies to writing stories. All three are good things, often similar, often different. His stories have appeared in the Bellevue Literary Review, Hippocampus Magazine, Whitefish Review, Leonardo Electronic Almanac (MishMash), and The Trumpeter: Journal of Ecosophy.
Steven Jay Cohen has been telling stories his whole life, and has worked professionally as a storyteller since 1991. A classically trained actor, he has worked both on stage and behind the microphone for most of his career. Born and raised in Brooklyn, Steven now resides in scenic western Massachusetts, where he lives with his wife, kids, and too many pets to mention.