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  • An Empire Of Stories

    Newsweek, NY
    Aug 29 2004

    An Empire Of Stories

    Turkey's tortured history inspires two fine novels

    By Malcolm Jones

    Newsweek Sept. 6 issue - Turkey is a novelist's dream, or perhaps a
    land dreamed by a novelist. A border country between Europe and the
    Middle East, it has for centuries been so many things to so many
    people - Christians, Muslims, Armenians, Greeks, Kurds and, of course,
    Turks - that it has become a place where fantasies and realities
    collide like tectonic plates. Everybody has a story, and, as two new
    novels set in Turkey demonstrate in their radically varying tales,
    every story is startlingly unique.


    In "Birds Without Wings," Louis de Bernieres tackles a piece of
    Turkish history with the same vigor that he used to sketch World War
    II Greece in "Corelli's Mandolin." But this is a darker book, with
    nothing like its predecessor's central love affair to soften its
    tragedy. Near the novel's beginning, de Bernieres introduces
    Philothei, his fictional village's most beautiful woman, about whom
    one character says she "reminded you of death," because to look upon
    her was to know that "everything decays away and is lost." Like
    Eskibahce, the village she inhabits, Philothei is notable for nothing
    but her beauty; both are doomed. By the end of "Birds Without Wings,"
    Eskibahce has been decimated by World War I and its aftermath. What
    had been a patchwork paradise of ethnicities - Greeks, Turks and
    Armenians - is gone, sacrificed for modern Turkey, forged by the
    ruthless, charismatic Kemal Ataturk out of the ashes of the Ottoman
    Empire. The Greeks have been exiled, the Armenians slaughtered. Those
    who remain are too impoverished and war-weary to know what hit them.

    De Bernieres takes his cues from Tolstoy - his characters' stories are
    always played out against the scrim of history. The Turkish novelist
    Orhan Pamuk is more a Kafka man. "Snow" takes place in the 1990s in
    the far-eastern Turkish village of Kars. And while the story, packed
    with nationalists, socialists and militant Islamists, has a
    superficial currency, its reality is dreamlike. Snow falls for most
    of the novel, isolating the town, where a poet, called Ka, has come
    to investigate a series of suicides by teenage Muslim girls who
    refuse the secular government's order to remove their headscarves.
    Artistically blocked for years, Ka, a Westernized sophisticate,
    suddenly begins to write poetry again. He falls in love so deeply
    that he begins to betray everything - even his own scruples - to preserve
    his happiness. Because he believes in nothing beyond his own desire,
    he is marked for tragedy.

    De Bernieres is so inventive - celebratory but never sentimental - that
    he is the more beguiling of the two novelists. But Pamuk is the more
    profound. At the end of "Snow," a young man says to the narrator,
    "I'd like to tell your readers not to believe anything you say about
    me, anything you say about any of us. No one could understand us from
    so far away." By refusing to condescend to his characters - by just
    showing them, not explaining them - Pamuk endows even the most
    reprehensible figures with dignity. Like de Bernieres, Pamuk never
    generalizes. In their indelible novels, every tragedy wears a
    different face.
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