Book description
Mother Land is an autobiographical novel, a minutely remembered
description of childhood on an Aegean island, marked by the furious
opposition of hostile yet neighbouring cultures. Dmetri Kakmi was born
into an age-old Greek community on the now-Turkish island of Bozcaada
in the early 1960s. His nine-year-old self tries to make sense of the
escalating tension between Greek and Turk, Muslim and Christian, just
as he tries to understand the violence between his cosmopolitan mother
and his fisherman father. Before the family emigrates to Australia,
leaving behind their beautiful, if impoverished, homeland, he reveals
with chilling clarity how violence begets violence, in even the most
unexpected of people. Returning as an adult to try to make sense of
his experience and to make peace with the past, Dmetri Kakmi uncovers
a number of family secrets and the final pieces of the jigsaw fall
into place.