The Road to Home: My Life and TimesVartan Gregorian's tale starts with a childhood of poverty, deprivation, and enchantment in the Armenian quarter of Tabriz, Iran. As the world reeled from depression into six years of warfare, his mother died, leaving his grandmother Voski as the loving staff of his life. Through unlettered example and instruction, he learned about the first of his many worlds: the strenuousness required for survival, the fairy tale that explained existence, the place and name of his own star in the night sky, how to maneuver as a member of a Christian minority in a benevolent Muslim kingdom, the beauty and inspiration of Armenian Church liturgy, the exciting foreign world of ten-year-old American westerns, the richness of life on the streets. He learned the magic of the innumerable worlds he could find in books -- and he wanted to visit them all. As the spell books cast on him grew more powerful, so did the constraints imposed by his father's indifference to his dreams of redirecting his life through learning. So, one day when he was fifteen years old, he presented himself at an Armenian-French lycee in Beirut, Lebanon, to start the arduous task of becoming a person of learning and consequence. This book tells not only how he reached that school but also about the many people who guided, supported, taught, and helped him on an extravagantly absorbing and varied journey from Tabriz to Beirut to Palo Alto to Tenafly to London, from Stanford University to San Francisco State University to the University of Texas at Austin to the University of Pennsylvania to the New York Public Library to Brown University and, currently, to the presidency of Carnegie Corporation of New York. With witty stories and memorable encounters, Dr. Gregorian describes his public and private lives as one education after another. He has written a love story about life. |
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THE ROAD TO HOME: My Life and Times
User Review - KirkusThe restless Gregorian—presidencies at the New York Public Library, Brown University, the Carnegie Corporation—offers a memoir that expertly blends poetry, pedantry, progressivism, and unruly ... Read full review
The road to home: my life and times
User Review - Not Available - Book VerdictHow a Christian Armenian left Muslim Tabriz and eventually acceded to the presidencies of the Carnegie Corporation, Brown University, and the New York Public Library. Read full review
Contents
1 | |
39 | |
63 | |
107 | |
ELEVEN The City of Brotherly Love | 215 |
TWELVE A Rendezvous with the New York Public Library | 267 |
THIRTEEN Brown University | 305 |
POSTSCRIPT | 327 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | 333 |
INDEX | 339 |
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academic administration Afghanistan American Andrew Heiskell Armenian community Armenian Genocide Arts and Sciences asked Astor beautiful became Beirut Berkeley Brooke Astor Brown Brown University campus Center chairman church Clare College Collège Arménien course cultural dean difficult dinner Faculty of Arts father figures financial find finish first five French friends gave graduate grandmother Gregorian honor human institutions intellectual Iran Iranian John Silber Kabul knew leaders learned letters librarians Library’s major menian million mother Muslim never office official Omar Khayyám one’s party Penn Persian Philadelphia political Professor Progressive Labor Party provost regents Russian San Francisco scholars search committee Silber sister social Soviet Stanford Tabriz teacher teaching Tehran Texas thought tion told took trustees University of Pennsylvania university’s Vartan Vartan Gregorian Vratzian wanted wife wrote York Public Library