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Pamuk's Challenger?

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  • Pamuk's Challenger?

    Financial Express
    July 28, 2007 Saturday


    PAMUK'S CHALLENGER?



    When Turkey's Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk told a Swiss
    journalist that "30,000 Kurds and one million Armenians were killed
    in these lands, and nobody but me dares to talk about it," he was put
    on trial for "insulting" Turkishness. Fellow novelist Elif Shafak was
    put on the stands too because one of the characters in her second
    English novel The Bastard of Istanbul has a family of Armenians
    talking about them being "genocide survivors who lost all their
    relatives at the hands of Turkish butchers in 1915" She was promptly
    sued by right-wing attorney Kemal Kerincsiz, who had also sued Pamuk
    and a host of others for hurting Turkey's sensibilities. Both Pamuk
    and Shafak were spared of doing time in prison.

    But at least in Shafak's case, she ended up being discussed much more
    than the book. And thereby hangs a tale. Shafak, who had showed a lot
    of promise in her first English novel, The Flea Palace, doesn't quite
    live up to her reputation in this one. Though the premise is fiery
    enough - it's set across two countries, the US and Turkey, and
    follows two families, the Turkish one living in Istanbul, and the
    Armenian one living in America - and enough twists and turns
    befitting a potboiler, it doesn't necessarily convert into a good
    read. But first the story. Mustafa, Turkish, studying in America
    falls in love with an American, Rose, who is divorced from her
    Armenian husband. Rose is particularly happy to take sweet revenge on
    her Armenian in-laws because her daughter Armanoush will be brought
    up by a Turkish father. When she grows up to be 21, Armanoush, who
    has always been in touch with her Armenian roots, strangely wants to
    go to Istanbul (but Armenians don't live there anymore, right?). She
    stays with her stepfather's family, and stumbles onto a difficult
    secret. The Turkish family of four generations, including the eldest
    suffering from Alzheimer's and the youngest running a tattoo parlour
    and mother of a "bastard" daughter from where Shafak picks the title,
    keeps Armanoush busy. She goes through a roller-coaster experience,
    not least because of the sight and sounds of Istanbul's streets, the
    incessant shouting, bullying, haranguing that takes place there. She
    learns why her stepfather has kept himself safe, till now that is, in
    America - the men of the family "for generations had died young". If
    Mustafa's misdeed - he rapes his sister - is a metaphor for Turkey's
    consistent denial of genocide, it doesn't quite work. Because thanks
    to historians and the Armenian diaspora themselves, the Armenian
    genocide is known. It's not kept a secret like Mustafa's sister does
    the rape. Though Shafak fills her novel with sentences like -
    "Istanbul is a hodgepodge of 10 million lives. It is an open book of
    ten million scrambled stories." - she will have to do better than
    this to take on Pamuk.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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