Book: A Night Of Drinking Takes A Deadly Turn In Chris Bohjalian’s Spy Thriller ‘The Flight Attendant’

Vermont Public Radio, VT
March 8 2018


A Night Of Drinking Takes A Deadly Turn In Chris Bohjalian’s Spy Thriller ‘The Flight Attendant’ 
  


The new novel The Flight Attendant is a page-turner thriller — and the 20th book by Vermont’s own Chris Bohjalian.

In the book, protagonist Cassie Bowden finds that the man she slept with after a blackout night of too much booze has been murdered in the very bed she shared with him overnight. Things escalate from there.

VPR’s Mitch Wertlieb spoke with Bohjalian about his newest book.

Wertlieb: “Before we get into the meat of the plot that drives The Flight Attendant, what made you choose a character who works at that job to be the focal point of your story?”

Bohjalian: “The book had its origins in March of 2016. I had just flown from Yerevan, Armenia to New York City via Moscow. And I was meeting a friend for dinner at 7:30 — I didn’t have time to take a catnap, So I went straight to the restaurant, dropped off my bags and I went to the bar.

“I come from a family of alcoholics on both sides, so I’m never going to glamorize alcoholism, but the reality is that a beautiful bar is, aesthetically, a beautiful thing — the balustrades, the bottles, the glasses, the way everything is lit. And I was thinking about the beauty of the alcohol, I was thinking about Russia and I was thinking about the miracle of aviation — the fact I had breakfast in Armenia and I’m having dinner in New York City. And I asked the bartender for scrap paper and I started to write frantically over the next 45 minutes.

“I was thinking about the beauty of the alcohol, I was thinking about Russia and I was thinking about the miracle of aviation … I asked the bartender for scrap paper and I started to write frantically over the next 45 minutes.” — Author Chris Bohjalian

“Now, well that’s when the book really began. It might have been gestating a long time. When I was a little boy, my uncle had five wives — not at the same time; he’d got divorced four times. His second wife was a flight attendant, or what we called then a ‘stewardess.’ And even as a little boy I understood the waft of scandal that permeated his divorce and the aroma of glamour that surrounded his new bride. She was young, she was beautiful, she went everywhere with this little dachshund under her arm, and she flew internationally.

And my parents used to always joke, ‘You know she’s a spy.’ I have no idea if my Aunt Liz was a spy, but that night in the bar when I was thinking about aviation and flight attendants, I thought to myself, ‘Why have I never written about these amazing women and men, and what they do?’ And I was off and running.”

Wertlieb: We’re not giving away too much here by saying that she does wake up with this murdered person in her bed, but we know right away who the killer is. This is not a ‘who-done-it.’ But because of her alcoholism and the blackouts that she has, she’s not even sure herself if she may have murdered the man.

“It’s a very Hitchcockian device, which is wonderful and gets the plot off and running. Why was it important for you to create a character in Cassie Bowden who’s acting badly, but also elicits a lot of sympathy from the reader?”

Bohjalian: “First of all, I love the fact that you mentioned Hitchcock, and the fact that it’s really not a ‘who-done-it,’ but a ‘why-done-it.’ One of my favorite movies is Alfred Hitchcock’s North by Northwest from 1959 with the functional alcoholic Roger Thornhill. I was thinking a lot of Roger Thornhill when I was creating Cassie Bowden, a functional alcoholic who in the midst of her blackouts is capable of virtually anything she fears. That’s what I was after. 

“One of my favorite movies is Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘North by Northwest’ … I was thinking a lot of Roger Thornhill when I was creating Cassie Bowden, a functional alcoholic who in the midst of her blackouts is capable of virtually anything she fears. That’s what I was after.”

“The other thing that was important to me is that I love Cassie. She is so flawed but she is such a wounded bird. I really care about her so very much, and as glamorous as her outer life is, her inner life is a mess. Every day when I started writing this book, I would watch a video of Sia’s song “Chandelier” — that remarkable video, that remarkable song about one party girl’s reckless self-disregard, incredible self-loathing and inability to escape the allure of alcohol and binge-drinking.”

Wertlieb: “I’ve read a lot of your books, but this one in particular seems ready-made for a movie version. I mean, there is a ruthless Russian assassin who’s on Cassie’s trail, which she doesn’t even know about through most of the book. It’s only towards the end that she realizes, ‘Oh my gosh, my life is in danger here, never mind who killed this guy that I slept with.’

“That assassin though has a conscience of her own. It makes her something more than just a cold-hearted killer, which I think is also remarkable that you were able to work that into the book. There’s international intrigue, FBI probes that have to deal with possible chemical weapons disposal and who has these secrets — there are twists galore. Did you write this novel with your own ulterior motive for getting it to the big screen?”

Bohjalian: “No. And I also didn’t realize how in the midst of the zeitgeist I would be. In 2016, two narrative gifts fell into my lap. The first were allegations of Russian meddling in the presidential election, allegations we now know are fact.

“And the second was I went back to Armenia in late August of 2016 to go to the line of contact between the Armenians and the Azeris to write a story for The New York Times about this world where the trenches of the First World War meet the drones of the present, where these soldiers face off a half-mile apart.

“And I was standing there in my flak jacket and helmet, and I was chatting with a British-Armenian philanthropist about projects he desired to create to jumpstart the Armenian economy. And suddenly we were talking about what happens when a deal goes bad with Russian oligarchs in Dubai. And it was chilling, and I knew this was material I just had to use.

“[I]t’s a thriller certainly, but I hope it’s also about drones, chemical weapons, Syria, social media manipulation and social media terrorism — all current topics of conversation today.”

“And so yeah, it’s a thriller certainly, but I hope it’s also about drones, chemical weapons, Syria, social media manipulation and social media terrorism — all current topics of conversation today. And yes, it does have a movie deal, you’re absolutely right. I’m thrilled to tell you that Kaley Cuoco, Penny of The Big Bang Theory, has optioned it and it is set up with Warner Brothers Television for a limited series a la The Handmaid’s Tale or Big Little Lies.”

Wertlieb: “Wow. That’s big news. OK. I had two long plane trips recently to take, to California, so six hours on a plane. I read the bulk of this book with flight attendants really walking up and down the aisles there. They’ve always had a hard job to do. You’re dealing with anything from screaming kids to people who’ve had too much to drink themselves from the drink cart, people may be getting sick. Was this book also an attempt to let people know, ‘Hey look, your flight may have gone bad, but please, be nice to your flight attendant’?”

Bohjalian: “The stories they told me about passenger misbehavior were absolutely incredible: naked passengers, passengers trying to climb over the beverage cart, A-list celebrities telling them never to make eye contact. And the reality is they are always civil, and they are always going to have their act together when the worst that can happen suddenly happens.

“For example, we’ve often seen a female flight attendant apply lipstick before beginning the final descent. Those are called her ‘landing lips.’ But that isn’t aesthetics, that isn’t vanity. In many cases it’s because the flight attendant knows that if there’s an emergency evacuation or a crash landing and she needs to give instructions, if she has her lipstick on it will be easy for the hearing-impaired to read her lips. If those orange oxygen masks ever fall, it’s all of us who will be screaming into them, not the flight attendants.”

Chris Bohjalian will be reading from the book, along with a talk and signing,        

Turkey Summons Dutch Envoy, ‘Firecely’ Condenms Armenia Genocide Vote

The Independent, Nigeria
Feb 24 2018

German reporter Deniz Yucel walks free after a year in Turkish jail

DPA international (Englischer Dienst), Germany
 Friday 6:37 PM GMT
German reporter Deniz Yucel walks free after a year in Turkish jail
by  Bill Heaney, Bernd Roeder and Niels C Sorrells in Berlin, Michael
Fischer in Munich, and Shabtai Gold, Linda Say and Can Merey in
Istanbul
Berlin (dpa) -
The journalist whose arrest in Turkey last February became a major
sticking point in relations between Berlin and Ankara walked free on
Friday after a year of incarceration.
German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel, who earlier called Deniz
Yucel's release "a good day for us all," said the journalist had
departed for the airport.
"I want to especially thank the Turkish government for its support in
speeding up the legal process," Gabriel said, who revealed that he had
twice met Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the matter, a
detail he had never publicized before.
A photograph of Yucel hugging his wife outside prison was tweeted by
his lawyer Veysel Ok and by his employer, German newspaper Die Welt.
The image shows the pair embracing as Deniz holds a bunch of parsley -
a "flower of our love," Deniz explained in an article for Die Welt in
December. The high walls of the prison and barbed-wire-topped fencing
can be seen in the background. His wife, Dilek Mayaturk-Yucel, had
earlier tweeted: "Finally!!! Finally!!! Finally!!! Deniz is free!"
"Of course I am delighted for him, for his wife and family," German
Chancellor Angela Merkel said, thanking all those who had worked for
his release.
"It shows perhaps that dialogue is not always useless. You never know
exactly how things are going to turn out."
Yucel, 44, was arrested in Istanbul in February 2017 and remanded in
custody on suspicion of terrorism-related offences, but he had yet to
be officially charged of any crime by state prosecutors.
A Turkish court ordered Yucel's release after accepting an indictment
from prosecutors which asked for up to 18 years in prison for the
journalist on charges of "making propaganda for a terrorist
organization" and "inciting people to hatred and hostility."
The three-page indictment alleged Yucel used the term "Armenian
genocide," and had contact with members of the outlawed Kurdistan
Workers' Party (PKK) and followers of cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom the
government accuses of orchestrating a failed coup in 2016.
Yucel allegedly has one book by Gulen, according to the charges, which
also mentioned a joke the journalist once related about Turks and
Kurds.
Erdogan expressed his views on Yucel on a number of occasions, saying
he was "clearly an agent terrorist" and a "German agent." The
president said there was footage and evidence to prove his claims.
Die Welt editor-in-chief Ulf Poschardt on Friday lauded the media's
cooperation in Yucel's case, thanking those who didn't publish
information that could have put him in danger while in detention.
However, Poschardt added, the fight is far from over, promising to
continue trying to free the 150 journalists still in Turkish jail.
The former editor-in-chief of Cumhuriyet, Can Dundar, who lives in
exile in Europe, was less optimistic, warning that Yucel's release
would have negative consequences on press freedom in Turkey.
"Erdogan now knows that it's possible to negotiate over journalists,"
he said. "Erdogan received something in return, we just don't know
what yet. Why shouldn't he imprison ever more journalists?" he said.
Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim had hinted ahead of a meeting
with Merkel in Berlin on Thursday that there would be movement in the
Yucel case. "I hope that he will be released soon. I am of the opinion
that there will be a development soon," Yildirim said in an interview
with German state-run broadcaster ARD.
He insisted Turkey's judiciary is independent.
After Yucel was released, Yildirim expressed hope that the two
countries would "jointly" take steps to improve their relationship.
"It seems that some problems in Germany-Turkey relations in the past
period have been resolved today," Yildirim was quoted by the Turkish
Anadolu news agency as saying in Munich, where he was attending the
annual global security conference. "God willing, it will get better."
Since the end of 2017, Turkey has been seeking to improve its battered
relationship with Europe, and especially Germany, a key trading
partner and home to millions of people of Turkish descent.
Some members of the Turkish community in Germany expressed joy.
"We are hugely delighted that he has been set free," community leader
Gokay Sofuoglu told dpa, describing him as "a positively zany,
freedom-loving journalist."

Artsakh’s Talish reviving after 2016 devastation

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 7 2018
 
 
Artsakh’s Talish reviving after 2016 devastation
 
18:11, 07 Feb 2018
 
Artsakh’s Talish village is reviving after it was devastated as a result of Azerbaijan aggression in April 2016.
 
Seventeen houses are ready for exploitation, reconstruction of the main street is in process, the water supply system has been changed, head of the community Vilen Petrosyan told Public Radio of Armenia.
 
Today there are only men living in the village, but one family has already returned to its home.
 
Member of the Armenian National Assembly, singer Shushan Petrosyan has recently toured the village to disperse rumors that construction works have been halted.
 
Shushan says the traces of 2016 destruction have partly been eliminated, and “new breath can be felt in the village.”
 
The cultural center, where the singer has performed on many occasions in the past, has also been renovated. Before the hall is ready to host new cultural events, Shushan Petrosyan is organizing concerts in the military units of Martuni, Stepanakert and Karvachar.
 

Sports: Football: Friends reunited as Wenger salutes Arsenal new boys

Agence France Presse
February 4, 2018 Sunday 12:35 AM GMT
Football: Friends reunited as Wenger salutes Arsenal new boys
 London, Feb 4 2018
Arsene Wenger says the instinctive understanding between old friends
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Henrikh Mkhitaryan can transform
Arsenal's turbulent season.
Aubameyang marked his Arsenal debut with a goal in Saturday's 5-1
demolition of Everton, while Mkhitaryan provided three assists in his
first start for the Gunners.
The swaggering show from the former Borussia Dortmund team-mates was a
much-needed boost for Arsenal boss Wenger after a difficult January
that saw Alexis Sanchez force through a move to Manchester United,
while the north Londoners struggled on the pitch.
Gabon striker Aubameyang joined from Dortmund on deadline day for a
club record £56 million, reuniting with Armenia midfielder
Mkhitaryan, who arrived earlier in the window from United in a swap
deal for Sanchez.
While Aaron Ramsey scored his first career hat-trick against Everton,
it was the promising partnership between Aubameyang and Mkhitaryan
that stole the show.
"Overall, the two players integrated well into our game and they
looked as if they had played for us forever," said Wenger.
"They have similar qualities to what our game is about. Technically,
they are good. They are quick and overall it was a first convincing
performance."
Aubameyang was a constant menace with his pace and energy and, while
his goal was fortunate given he was offside when he ran onto
Mkhitaryan's pass, there was enough quality on display to suggest he
may keep the misfiring Alexandre Lacazette on the bench for the
foreseeable future.
"The quality of his movement and finishing was excellent. He gives
problems to defenders with his movement, he is always looking to go
into spaces that are difficult to cover," Wenger said.
"When he gets ahead it is hard to catch him. When we understand him
better we can make more of that.
"He is not at his best physically and still has some work to do on
that, but the price is reasonable I think, overall for that quality of
striker in today's market."
Mkhitaryan struggled to make an impact at United, but he looked
revitalised at the Emirates Stadium, linking with Aubameyang and Mesut
Ozil to devastating effect as Arsenal tore Everton to pieces with four
goals in the first half.
"He is a good link player and he works very hard as well," Wenger said.
"Overall, I think he looked well-accepted by the rest of the team and
was understanding very well how we want to play. I can say is that it
was a convincing debut."
- Ice-cool Ramsey -
Wenger also reserved praise for Ramsey as the Wales midfielder finally
took his manager's advice to stay cool in front of goal.
"I felt always -- when I watched the games after on the video -- you
think always that he is there in a good position in the box and I felt
always that he had between 10 and 15 goals at least in his locker,"
Wenger said.
"He didn't do it until now because I think he rushed, sometimes, with
his finishing. He looks much calmer."
Everton boss Sam Allardyce was furious with his side's display as they
tarnished his 500th match as a Premier League manager.
"I'm angry because accepting an instruction is the players'
responsibility at this level of football," he said.
"We tried to give those instructions. There was a very good
performance by Swansea on Tuesday against Arsenal and we based our
plan on that.
"We set out to play like that, unfortunately Swansea played at the top
of their game and we played at the bottom.
"That is why we were tumbling goals left, right and centre with our
pathetic performance. None of it was any good. All the team played
crap."

Sports: Wenger lauds Henrikh Mkhitaryan’s positive impact at Arsenal

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 5 2018
11:01, 05 Feb 2018

Arsenal new boy Henrikh Mkhitaryan was singled out for praise by Arsene Wenger after a virtuoso display agaisnt Everton on Saturday night.
Arsene Wenger said that the arrival of Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Henrikh Mkhitaryan have sparked a new sense of purpose within the dressing room.

He said that the 29-year-old’s performance  reminded him of Santi Cazorla, a player whose absence has most coincided with Arsenal’s dips over recent years.

“There are similarities there,” said Wenger. “Santi was an exceptional football player. I met Mkhitaryan before (he joined Manchester United) and I have always liked his game.

“He’s a player dedicated totally. He comes from a country, Armenia, where you need special character to become a great football player. He looks happy to play football simply because he just loves it.”

“Your main target is to get the players to enjoy the game they play and to share it with the fans,” said Wenger.

“When you have new players it always gives a little positive swing, and it wakes everybody up as well, because there’s suddenly competition.”

Ashot Stepanyan: That is to say, if I beat a person I will pay less than if I smoke in the street (video)

The participants of the “We Will Smoke” initiative were protesting against the draft law of the RA Ministry of Health today in front of the Government building. The participants of the action are concerned about the amount of fines imposed on smokers.

As it is known, according to the draft law on “The reduction and prevention of tobacco products exploitation,” for example, administrative fine for smoking in public places will be 250 000 drams for smoking in public places, 100 000 drams for smoking in bus stops, and so on.

“There is no place for smoking. If there were such a place, everyone would go there. There is no place intended, but smoking is already banned. If people break the law, and do not smoke in special areas, then think of a new law to punish those people, “said Sedrak Poghosyan, the participant of the initiative.

The fines imposed by the draft law are higher than the penalties for other offenses punishable by criminal offenses.

“It is fined 50-150 000 drams for causing light bodily harm, and 250 thousand drams for smoking in the street. That is to say, if I beat a person I will pay less than if I smoke in the street,” said Sedrak Poghosyan.

Non-smokers also protest with smokers.

“There is no published mechanism in the bill concerning who will penalize and how will happen. Suppose we are a few guys smoking in the pub, and the pub owner lets us. Who will come and say, do not smoke?” said Ashot Stepanyan, the participant of the initiative.

Unlike the initiators, many non-smoking citizens favor the law. It is expected that the law will come into force in November 2018.

Azerbaijani Press: Armenia tries to present Azerbaijanis’ Blue Mosque as Iranian

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Jan 31 2018

By Rashid Shirinov

Since their settlement in the historical Azerbaijani territories in the first part of the 19th century, Armenians started a targeted policy of destroying the architectural and historical monuments of the Azerbaijanis in those lands. As a result, today it is almost impossible to find any preserved Azerbaijani monument in Armenia. The Blue Mosque is one of the rare examples of the Azerbaijani heritage in Yerevan that have not yet been completely destroyed.

The construction of the mosque began in 1760 and ended in 1765, during the reign of Huseynali Khan of the Qajar dynasty. The mosque was named given its dome covered with blue glazed bricks. The entire complex of the Blue Mosque covers an area of ​​7,000 square meters, including a courtyard, a ritual building, a dome and a minaret, paved with decorative faience tiles. The minaret of 24 meters high in the southeastern part of the mosque is the only one preserved out of the four original minarets.

Recently, the Armenian media quoted Armenian Deputy Minister of Culture Arev Samuelyan as saying that the Armenian authorities intend to include the Blue Mosque in Yerevan in the preliminary list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites as a Persian cultural heritage. This, of course, caused discontent of the Azerbaijanis, whose ancient architectural monument Armenians try to attribute to another nation.

“Armenia, by its plan to include the Blue Mosque in Yerevan in the preliminary list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites through Iran, as always, seeks to destroy any reminders of the mosque’s belonging to the Azerbaijani cultural and religious heritage,” political scientist Fuad Akhundov said in his recent interview with Interfax-Azerbaijan.

He noted that these plans of the Armenian authorities, who are obsessed with erasing of Azerbaijani traces from their history, once again demonstrate historical illiteracy of the Armenian establishment.

“There is an Armenian church built in 1861 in the center of Baku. Given the approach of the Armenian authorities to the national identification of the mosque in Yerevan, equally, the Armenian church in Baku should be considered Russian and not Armenian, since it was built in the period of the Russian Empire. And this is a complete absurd,” Akhundov said.

The expert added that the Armenian authorities have long been pursuing a policy of armenization of the historical center of Yerevan with the aim of destroying the cultural heritage of the Azerbaijanis who created the city. He reminded that during the Soviet period the Armenian authorities destroyed the whole medieval city – the Irevan Fortress, including 850 houses.

Akhundov is sure that the plan of the Armenian authorities to present the Blue Mosque as a Persian cultural heritage will fail.

“Firstly, the Iranian authorities have been considering the relevant appeal of the Armenian authorities for a year and a half and the Iranian side does not respond to it. Secondly, the Azerbaijani and Iranian authorities enjoy excellent relations, and Tehran will not harm them. Thirdly, UNESCO will not support the Armenian application,” the political scientist said.

Akhundov also noted that the Azerbaijani authorities can easily prove the fact that the Blue Mosque is a masterpiece of Azerbaijani architecture and the cultural heritage of the Azerbaijani people.

“There is enough evidence that the Blue Mosque is the heritage of the Azerbaijanis and it is necessary to use it to once again demonstrate to the whole world stubbornness of the current Armenian authorities in matters of falsification and appropriation of the heritage of neighboring peoples,” he said.