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"Snow", A Novel By Orhan Pamuk, Was Translated Into Armenian

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  • "Snow", A Novel By Orhan Pamuk, Was Translated Into Armenian

    "SNOW", A NOVEL BY ORHAN PAMUK, WAS TRANSLATED INTO ARMENIAN

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    07.05.2009 20:15 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ A novel having the greatest demand in Europe, Orhan
    Pamuk's "Snow" is now available to the Armenian reader thanks to Hakob
    Soghomonyan who spent two years for translating the book. Knowing
    about it beforehand, the author refused honorary payments.

    As mentioned by Lilit Grigoryan, Head of Armenian National and Cultural
    Society, the novel published in 1000 copies was translated from
    Russian, as there are no Turkish literature translators in Armenia.

    During the presentation ceremony, Rouben Hovsepyan, writer and editor
    of "Droshak" newspaper noted, "With his novel, Orhan Pamuk revealed
    the callous Armenian trace seen from behind the snow covering the
    historical Armenian town no longer populated by Armenians."

    "Apart from its cognitive value, the novel also reveals realities
    never described by any Turkish writer so far," Lilit Galstyan added.

    The developments take place in Kars. A young Turkish poet permanently
    residing in Germany arrives there to investigate suicides of young
    women who ended their lives as sign of protest against constraint
    on Muslim headscarves. The sudden snowfall brings the author face to
    face with popular uprising caused by Turkish government's unrestrained
    desire to Europeanize the Muslim state. In addition to the 1000 copies
    published in Eastern Armenian language, the Western Armenian version
    of the book will be published in Lebanon in 500 examples.

    A contemporary Turkish writer and laureate of several national and
    international awards, Ferit Orhan Pamuk was awarded a Nobel Prize
    in Literature in 2006. In 2005, the Turkish Government sued him for
    making the following statement in an interview with the Swiss Das
    Magazin periodical (February 2005), "One million Armenians and thirty
    thousand Kurds were murdered in Turkey. Nobody voices the fact, and
    I am hated because I speak about it." The writer currently resides
    in New York. His works are available in more than 40 languages.
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