Elias Venezis was born and raised in Kydonies (modern
Ayvalık,
Turkey), where he completed high school. In 1914, Venezis’ family fled from Kydonies to
Lesbos to avoid persecution but returned to
Asia Minor after the Greek army liberated
Smyrna and its hinterland in 1919. When the area was recaptured by the Turkish Army in 1922, Venezis was taken prisoner and enslaved in a "
labour battalion". He was 18 years old. The prisoners were marched into the interior, but few arrived at the destination, since most of them were either killed on the way, or died of the hardships they were exposed to. Of the 3000 "conscripted" into his “labour brigade” only 23 survived. When Venezis was released he was returned to Lesbos. There he met
Stratis Myrivilis, who had founded the weekly newspaper
Kambana, and was encouraged by him to write an account of "his horrific experiences as a hostage in Turkey" for the newspaper. The novel which resulted was published in serialised form in
Kambana in 1924. However it did not become well known in Greece until an expanded version was published in book form in 1931. His major novels are about his life in Asia Minor:
Aeolian Land describes the lost Eden of his childhood summers;
Number 31328 the horrific experience of the death marches, and
Tranquility his struggle to adjust to living in Greece. In Greece, Venezis worked for a bank while writing in his spare time. He married Stavritsa Molyviati in 1938. She too was from Ayvalik. During the
German occupation of Greece, Venezis was taken prisoner again. He was released following the intercession of high-ranking Greek officials including
Archbishop Damaskinos. After the war, Venezis wrote a column in the newspaper
Acropolis. He was made a member of the
Academy of Athens. ==Books by Elias Venezis==