The Great Fire: One American's Mission to Rescue Victims of the 20th Century's First Genocide

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Air date: 
Fri, 08/21/2015 - 11:00am to 11:30am
The Great Fire: One American's Mission to Rescue Victims of the 20th Century's First Genocide

Host Jennifer Kemp interviews Lou Ureneck about his new book, "The Great Fire: One American's Mission to Rescue Victims of the 20th Century's First Genocide," which tells the story of a rescue operation led by a small-town minister from upstate New York. He saved more than a quarter-million people from the Ottoman city of Smyrna, the empire's richest city, and scene of the last terrifying episode of the genocide that killed millions of Armenians and Greeks at the beginning the last century. 

Lou Ureneck teaches journalism at Boston University. A former Nieman fellow and editor in residence at Harvard University, Ureneck was a newspaper editor, in Maine and Philadelphia. 

Ureneck's first book, "Backcast," won the National Outdoor Book Award for literary merit. His second book, Cabin, was about a cabin he built in the hills of western Maine. The book won him praise as a contemporary Thoreau.
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