Twice a Stranger never loses sight of the painful experience of losing homes and homelands. Clark skillfully
presents many poignant firsthand accounts of the population exchange. He draws on both his own interviews with
Greeks and Turks and work by local historians such as Iskender Ouml;zsoy, a journalist from the town of Tuzla on
the Sea of Marmara. Oumlzsoy regrets that his work did not start even sooner; but Clark, Oumlzsoy, and others fortunately
did not wait until it was too late altogether. Clark, for his part, has compiled a remarkable body of testimony
about the heavy human cost of forced migration...Twice a Stranger is a fascinating book that should be read.