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'Istanbul' features rich, complex characters, a little magic

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  • 'Istanbul' features rich, complex characters, a little magic

    Flint Journal (Michigan)
    April 1, 2007 Sunday
    THE FLINT JOURNAL FIRST EDITION

    'Istanbul' features rich, complex characters, a little magic;
    FLINT JOURNAL REVIEW

    by Carol Azizian, [email protected] * 810.766.6245


    If "every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way," as Tolstoy said,
    then the families in Elif Shafak's latest novel, "The Bastard of
    Istanbul," surely have an edge on dysfunction.

    Shafak weaves a complex web of characters with magic realism and
    historical events but focuses on two extended families - a Turkish
    one in Istanbul and an Armenian one in San Francisco and Tucson.

    The Tchakhmakhchians, an Armenian family, can't seem to forget their
    tragic history of massacres and deportations. The Kazancis, a Turkish
    family, live in a state of denial or ignorance - much like the
    Turkish state, which has not yet acknowledged the genocide of 1.5
    million Armenians in 1915.

    "The Bastard of Istanbul" is Shafak's second novel in English and
    some critics contend that she's still finding her voice in that
    language.

    I, too, stumbled over several sentences (for example, "sex is far
    more sensual than physical"). At times, her digression into magic
    realism, along with her enormous cast of characters, grow tiresome
    and overwhelming.

    But Shafak challenges the reader and tackles profound subjects with
    wit and wisdom.

    The lives of the two families intersect when Armanoush, an
    intellectually curious woman who discusses Armenian/Turkish relations
    in a cybercafe, travels to Turkey to visit the family of Mustafa, her
    stepfather. (Her biological father is Armenian; her mother is from
    Kentucky.) Mustafa is the long-lost brother of the Kazanci clan.

    That clan includes Mustafa's outrageous sisters: Zeliha, the bold,
    sexy owner of a tattoo parlor; Banu, a clairvoyant who believes she's
    informed by djinns on each shoulder, one evil, one good; Feride,
    whose hairstyles change as often as her mental diagnoses; and
    Cevriye, a teacher of Turkish history who spouts propaganda.

    Asya, a 19-year-old existentialist who loves Johnny Cash, is Zeliha's
    daughter and the "bastard" of the title. She forms a bond with
    Armanoush, her American contemporary.

    With the exception of Armanoush, most of the women are a bit
    off-kilter or just plain zany.

    Especially entertaining for anyone who comes from an ethnic
    background is the section where Armanoush posts a "self-scoring test
    (on an Internet forum) that measured the degree of one's
    'Armenianness.'"

    "The Bastard of Istanbul" is a book that titillates the senses, with
    the sights, smells and sounds of Istanbul coming through vividly.

    The secrets uncovered in the journey are intriguing and by the end,
    deeply disturbing. The story ends unresolved, much like the political
    stalemate between Turkey and Armenia. But its universal message is
    undeniable (consider Darfur, for one).

    Shafak knows all too well the consequences of discussing a taboo
    subject like the genocide in her homeland. She was tried in the
    Turkish courts, and later acquitted, of "insulting Turkishness"
    because some of her fictional characters talk about it. In one
    segment, she flashes back to the past and depicts graphic scenes from
    the massacres.

    Like the Nobel Prize-winning Turkish author Orhan Pamuk, Shafak has
    become a target of rightist groups and a popular figure among the
    literati of Turkey.

    A professor at the University of Arizona, she curtailed her American
    book tour after the murder of Hrant Dink, a prominent Turkish
    newspaper editor of Armenian ancestry and a friend of hers.

    In Turkey, "eventually, every writer has to face the question - are
    you ready to be a public intellectual?" she told The New York Times.

    Give Shafak a few more years and she'll master the English language
    while turning out even more provocative novels. No doubt she'll
    become a public intellectual here, too.

    Carol Azizian is a feature writer in The Journal's Today section.

    NOTES: THE BASTARD OF ISTANBUL

    By Elif Shafak

    Viking, 357 pages
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