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The Black Book
 
 

The Black Book [Kindle Edition]

Orhan Pamuk
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Product Description

*******

'A glorious flight of dark, fantastic invention . . . It offers many pleasures, Gothic, Borgesian and other, the best of which is a vision of Istanbul as a city of sinister complexity.' Patrick McGrath

Independent on Sunday

'One of the freshest, most original voices in contemporary fiction.'

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 868 KB
  • Print Length: 482 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1400078652
  • Publisher: Faber and Faber Fiction (18 Aug 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B005LVNEBA
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #25,524 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
39 of 39 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Readers of Snow and My Name is Red will not be disappointed by this long-awaited new translation of Pamuk's most celebrated novel. Pamuk's evocation of Istanbul in the repressive mid-1980s - a crumbling, fearful city of dreams - is masterful. The episodic plot - at once a retelling of Dante's search for Beatrice in the circles of hell and a Kafka-esque quest for what it means to be yourself - can seem slow and ponderous at times, although enlivened by the newspaper columns of the mysterious Celal, but it is the ideas that Pamuk is wrestling with that make this not only an amazing piece of literature, but an important and significant contribution. It isn't an easy read, but it will stay with you long after you have finished reading.

A word about the translation. It is brilliant, one of the best renderings of Turkish into English this reviewer has ever had the pleasure to read.
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26 of 27 people found the following review helpful
By Jonathan Birch VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
Darkly evocative, wackily postmodern, the writing of 2006 Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk is a treasure trove little known in Britain. The decaying and repressed Istanbul of 1980 is brought to life magnificently in The Black Book, which roughly follows a man called Galip as he searches both for clues and for his own identity following the disappearance of his wife. Of all the languages written in Latin characters, Turkish is surely the most unlike English. It was written in Arabic characters until 1928, and so constructing a sentence mainly involves writing one word and adding at least five suffixes. Given this, the quality of the new translation is incredible. Much of this fascinating book is a joy to read, and much of the prose is as good as any I've read in English in a long time.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
By Philip Spires TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
I have visited Turkey, but not Istanbul. It's one of those iconic places that keeps cropping up in travel plans, but then gets overlooked, possibly because its name fits so easily into my thoughts that I convince myself I have already been there. Having just read Orhan Pamuk's The Black Book, that illusion will be orders of magnitude stronger. Orhan Pamuk won the 2006 Nobel Prize for literature and this seems to have spurned new translations of his work, new versions which hopefully can widen his readership in the English-speaking world.

The Black Book is a gigantic work. And, in the way that I suspect most readers might understand the term, there is no plot. Suffice it to say that Galip wakes up one morning and his wife has disappeared. He assumes she has gone off to seek out her first husband, Celal, a well-known newspaper columnist. Galip sets off to find Celal and, he assumes, his wife, but strangely the journalist has also disappeared. As a means to help him track down the two missing people, Galip immerses himself in Celal's life, his writing and, gradually, his very identity. Effectively he becomes the person he is seeking. He re-reads his past work and discovers unknown things about his own, his wife's and her former husband's past. By then, however, we cannot be sure if we are dealing with reminiscences of Celal, Galip's interpretations of them, Galip's reworking of them, or, indeed, Galip's own words presented as if they were those of Celal.

But the plot in The Black Book is almost irrelevant. It's not a book that one reads to discover what happens. It's a book that's replete with flavour, experience and history, and the reader feasts on vast helpings of all three.

Byzantium, Constantinople, Istanbul - let's face it, there is no other city on earth that has been named three times and where, on each occasion, that name has passed into language as an expression of political, strategic, religious and economic pre-eminence. It's a city that bridges continents, ideologies and faiths. Nowhere else on earth has a greater claim to the very quintessence of humanity than Istanbul. And yet modern Istanbul is a Turkish city, and perhaps its most fascinating aspect is its potential to mirror contemporary debates on religion versus secularism, tradition versus modernity, imperial past versus global present.

The Black Book has thirty-six chapters, each having its own title and prefacing quotation. The form, at least in part, is its content, in that each chapter could be read as if it were an article written by Celal or by Galip impersonating Celal. There is no linear narrative. We experience what inspired the writer and there is no ordering of time or place. But we feel we are in that city. We feel we are living its history, whatever that might be. And we feel we are experiencing contemporary debates on its and its people's identity. The city is central to everything in the book, with its multiple histories and allegiances mixed into the melting pot of its contemporary form.

Throughout, Galip finds he gradually becomes his quarry, Celal. He trades identities and roles, but never permanently, never for sure. In this way the characters become the city, whose sense of place and multiplicity of identities pervade all, thus mirroring the apparent confusion of its - and humanity's - complexity. But the people eventually are always welcomed by some aspect of the city's - and humanity's - multi-faceted nature.

The Black Book is a work that demands to be re-read, but not because it is in any way a difficult or impenetrable read. I have never been to Istanbul, but like the book, I feel it will be an experience that, once tried, will demand to be re-visited.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Labyrinthian inquiry into the Turkish identity
This is a fascinating novel. To be sure, if you have read other books by Pamuk, you will recognize the themes: the void that Attaturk's reforms could not fill (after the collapse... Read more
Published 10 months ago by rob crawford
The impotents
Of course, we appreciate Orhan Pamuk's defense of freedom of expression and his viewpoints on the Armenian genocide or the war in Iraq. Read more
Published on 8 Dec 2009 by Luc REYNAERT
Pamuk's breakthrough work in a new translation
Celebrated Turkish Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk first found his own unique voice, along with a legion of loyal admirers, in this dense little musing on the nature of identity, which... Read more
Published on 27 Aug 2009 by Mutt
I dunno 'bout this........
This was like driving a car thats misfiring. When it did start to run true I found myself driving down country lanes in a foreign country in the fog with lots of unmarked... Read more
Published on 24 Feb 2009 by K. N. Tole
Excellent book, tough reading
Galip's wife, Ruya, leaves him one morning with a letter behind her. The Black Book is about Galip's transformation, while searching for his wife in the streets of Istanbul, from a... Read more
Published on 12 Dec 2008 by Kivanc Emiroglu
Plot-less and pointless worthless rubbish
Not worth the paper it is printed on really. Forget all the over the top reviews of this book as a "Mystical tour of the Orient" "Magic carpet ride blah blah blah" Forget the fact... Read more
Published on 31 July 2008 by Gogol
a visit into your own blackness
His best book for sure...a journey to search for a woman named Hulya(dream)and a book about dreams...never knowing what is real and what is unreal...a book that changed my life
Published on 13 Oct 2006 by S. E. Erbabacan
Hard going
The jacket description of this book as a detective novel is in modern speak an attempt to sex up the sale. Read more
Published on 14 Aug 2003 by Elizabeth Taylor
Weird but well worth it
The back jacket description of this as a book the turns the detective novel on its head is true but a bit of a red herring. Read more
Published on 28 April 2003 by Booksthatmatter
It's not John Grisham
I was led into reading this book by meeting an old University friend carrying a copy of "My Name is Red". Read more
Published on 24 Nov 2002
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