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Best-selling Turkish author too hot for some

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  • Best-selling Turkish author too hot for some

    FEATURE-Best-selling Turkish author too hot for some

    By Selcuk Gokoluk

    ANKARA, Oct 8 (Reuters) - His books have sold more copies than almost
    any other author in Europe this year and are hotly debated by
    housewives and intellectuals alike, but newspapers are reluctant to
    publish his work.

    Meet Ahmet Altan, whose latest collection of essays entitled "A Place
    Inside Us" has proved an unlikely hit with Turkish readers, selling
    nearly a million copies since May.

    In a country where serious literature has traditionally been confined
    to the elite, Altan's book, priced at just $2, is on sale even in some
    hairdressers' salons and village grocery stores.

    Muslim clerics have read out extracts from the book during Friday
    prayers.

    Only four other books have sold more than a million copies in Europe
    in the past five years, Altan's publisher says, and they include such
    world-famous titles as J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series.

    "A Place Inside Us" is a lyrical meditation on human emotions such as
    longing, loneliness and jealousy.

    Altan's six previous novels also focus on the complexity of human
    feelings, often against the lavish historical backdrop of the Ottoman
    Turkish Empire.

    But Altan is as well-known in Turkey for his radical politics as for
    his literary talent, and that is what has made him such a
    controversial figure in this half-Western, half-Oriental country which
    wants to join the European Union.

    He sparked outrage in Turkey a few years ago with a newspaper column
    where he invoked a fictional land called "Kurdey" -- a pun on the
    words "Turkey" and "Kurds" -- where minority Turks suffer
    discrimination from the majority Kurds.

    In an ironic reversal of roles that poked criticism at official policy
    in the mainly Kurdish southeast of the country, he described how
    Kurdish troops suppress all emblems of Turkish cultural identity, burn
    down Turkish peasants' houses and battle Turkish rebel guerrillas.

    "What would you do if you lived in such a country?" Altan asked his
    readers.

    MANY ENEMIES

    That was too much for Turkey's nationalist establishment to stomach. A
    court, invoking the country's tough security laws, handed down a
    suspended jail sentence of one and a half years.

    Since then, the former journalist has not been able to air his views
    in the newspapers.

    His harsh criticism of Turkish lawyers, journalists and historians
    have compounded his unpopularity in some circles.

    Altan has said Turkey is a country "founded on lies" because it is too
    frightened to look honestly at its own past, for example its treatment
    of ethnic minorities.

    Speaking to Reuters at his home in Istanbul, Altan said: "They did
    things better in Ottoman times. The culture was more tolerant, more
    inclusive. We had an Armenian foreign minister, Jewish army officers
    -- quite unthinkable today."

    "Istanbul also had famous homosexuals accepted by society," he
    said. Modern Istanbul has a lively gay subculture but few Turkish
    homosexuals in public life have come out of the closet.

    Altan was scathing about literary critics he said refused to accept
    that quality literature could be widely read.

    "Popularity and quality are not mutually exclusive. Look at the great
    novelists of the 19th century like (Honore de) Balzac and (Charles)
    Dickens. Ordinary people snatched up their books," said Altan, who
    added his own favourite author was Leo Tolstoy.

    "A good book does not respect social divisions. It is read by
    everyone, from cleaning ladies to professors," he said.

    Some Turks believe Altan's success shows the country is moving closer
    to Europe culturally as well as politically.

    Ahmet Sever, who heads a government campaign to promote Turkey's image
    in the EU, said the soaring sales of Altan's books showed the country
    could compete with the rest of Europe in the literary stakes.

    "We talk of the official Copenhagen criteria for joining the EU," he
    said, referring to standards on human rights and political freedoms
    Turkey must meet before starting entry talks.

    "But there are also unofficial criteria such as the habit of reading
    books which are an important indicator (of a country's European
    credentials)," he said.



    10/07/04 21:06 ET
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