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German book trade to honour outspoken Turkish author Pamuk

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  • German book trade to honour outspoken Turkish author Pamuk

    Agence France Presse
    June 22 2005

    German book trade to honour outspoken Turkish author

    Wed Jun 22,10:33 AM ET



    FRANKFURT (AFP) - Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk will receive the
    German book trade's prestigious peace prize this year, the German
    Publishers and Booksellers Association said on Wednesday.


    Pamuk is to accept the 25,000-euro (30,400-dollar) award at the
    Frankfurt Book Fair, the world's largest literary salon, on October
    23.

    Announcing its decision, the prize jury said Pamuk had a unique
    ability to bridge cultures.

    "In Orhan Pamuk, we are honouring an author who like no other writer
    of our time, explores the historical footprints of the West in the
    East and the East in the West," it said.

    "He is committed to a concept of culture based on knowledge and
    respect for others. Pamuk has created a genre in which Europe and
    Islamic Turkey co-exist."

    Pamuk, who lives in Istanbul, is known internationally for novels
    such as "My Name is Red", "The New Life", "The White Castle" "The
    Black Book" and most recently "Snow".

    His works have been translated into 20 languages.

    Set in 16th century Istanbul in the reign of Ottoman Sultan Murat
    III, "My Name is Red" is a meditation on tensions between East and
    West.

    Pamuk is no stranger to political controversy. Earlier this year, he
    angered nationalists in Turkey by publicly addressing the highly
    sensitive subject of the massacre of Armenians in World War I.

    In an interview with a Swiss newspaper, he said that "30,000 Kurds
    and one million Armenians were killed in Turkey."

    One local official ordered the seizure and destruction of his works.

    The Peace Prize is one of the highest distinctions in German
    literature.

    It is presented each year by the Association of German Publishers and
    Booksellers at the close of the Frankfurt Book Fair.

    Past winners of the prize, now in its 56th year, include the late US
    writer Susan Sontag and Hungarian novelist Peter Esterhazy.
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