Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Book Review: Let's Talk Turkey - Rebel Land By De Bellaigue Bloomsbu

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Book Review: Let's Talk Turkey - Rebel Land By De Bellaigue Bloomsbu

    LET'S TALK TURKEY; REBEL LAND **** BY CHRISTOPHER DE BELLAIGUE BLOOMSBURY

    The New Review
    April 18, 2010
    First Edition

    Rebel Land opens with the perplexed author staring at himself in the
    mirror in eastern Turkey: not only has he aged since his days as a
    foreign correspondent, but his self-conception is at odds with his
    actual reflection. It is the disjuncture between his personal view of
    Turkey and the one which was held up to him in protestation after he
    wrote an article about the country's history, that is the genesis of
    this book: after his article was published, Christopher de Bellaigue
    was reprimanded as an apologist for the Turks, and thereafter set
    out to investigate the truth by hearing first-hand the stories of the
    "forgotten peoples" of the land. (Kurdish troubles in the east linger,
    while Armenians still talk of a genocide in the region, in 1915-17.)

    The book exposes the complexities and compromises of narrative:
    De Bellaigue holds up many mirrors to many people, each reflecting
    different versions of the truth. He also ponders his own subjectivity
    as a one-time public schoolboy for whom "bucolic authoritarianism
    was cool".

    What would compel someone to leave behind their home country at all,
    in order to live among strangers? Insights into the author's own
    wanderlust create the engaging emotional landscape, tracing its roots
    in childhood and on into adulthood, when a romance with a Turkish lady
    first led him to the area. (Although that ended, his love affair with
    the country continued.)

    For one who, like myself, has travelled through eastern Turkey, whose
    wild, beautiful landscape lingers in the mind, this book is packed with
    fascinating factual nuggets. For those who have not ventured there,
    the author conjures vivid scenes. This book is far from perfect; an
    uneven cacophony. But it is precisely through honest consideration
    of the imperfection in life and in literature that the author finds
    his forte, shining valuable light on little-known terrains.
Working...
X