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An Evocative Tour Of All That Is Istanbul

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  • An Evocative Tour Of All That Is Istanbul

    AN EVOCATIVE TOUR OF ALL THAT IS ISTANBUL
    By Keith Monroe

    The Virginian-Pilot(Norfolk, VA.)
    March 19, 2006 Sunday
    The Virginian-Pilot Edition

    ISTANBUL Memories and the City
    ORHAN PAMUK
    Knopf. 373 pp. $26.95.

    SOME WRITERS flee home - Hemingway, Shakespeare, Zola. Others stay
    home and cultivate their own little patch - Faulkner and Austen.

    Orhan Pamuk is one of the latter. He grew up in the family's Pamuk
    Apartments where a grandmother or uncle was only a flight of stairs
    away. Nearing 60, he still lives in the Pamuk Apartments.

    Such rootedness can smack of the ingrown - Dickinson in Amherst,
    Flaubert in provincial Rouen. But Pamuk inhabits a city so fascinating
    and multifarious, it hardly seems eccentric to burrow deep.

    This book begins at the beginning, and few writers have ever captured
    the hothouse of childhood so well. Pamuk's recollections are vivid
    and deeply felt, and only gradually does he iris out from his family
    - where a beloved mother feuds with a ne'er-do-well father who is
    squandering the family fortune through ill-conceived business ventures.

    As Pamuk learns about a wider world, we learn with him about his
    adored city, often through the works of those who depicted it: The 18th
    century German artist Memling, the French writers Nerval and Flaubert
    and four melancholy Turks whom he counts as spiritual guides - Kemal,
    Kocu, Hisar, and Tanipar.

    This mixture of Western and Turkish influences is appropriate
    in a Turkish writer who was raised as an unbelieving Muslim in a
    westernized, bourgeois family. He observes of his Turkish artistic
    forebears: "After long deliberation they found an important and
    authentic subject, the decline and fall of the great empire into
    which they were born."

    Pamuk himself was born a half century or more after these men,
    in 1952. He has seen the crumbling city of his youth (population 1
    million) metastasize into a sprawling 10-million-person megalopolis.

    He mourns the replacement of much dilapidated ancient beauty with
    even more dilapidated modern ugliness.

    He could undoubtedly say a good deal about the decline of comity
    as well in a city that has replaced habitual melancholy with rising
    militancy. Pamuk was threatened with jail in 2005 for discussing the
    brutal treatment of Armenians by Turks a century ago. But this book
    stops long before the present.

    In fact, it ends around 1970, with Pamuk as a lackadaisical student
    of architecture who also paints. His distraught mother fears he'll
    try to make a living as an artist. "In a country as poor as ours,
    around so many weak, defeated, semiliterate people, to have the sort
    of life you deserve ... you have to be rich."

    To which, with the comical, cocksure obliviousness of youth, he offers
    Mom this reassurance: "I don't want to be an artist. I'm going to be
    a writer."

    It's not exactly Joyce's megalomaniac boast that he will forge the
    uncreated conscience of his race in the smithy of his soul, but it
    does show that "Istanbul's" submerged theme is "A Portrait of the
    Young Artist Discovering his Vocation."

    Since Pamuk is Turkey's leading novelist and on the Nobel short list,
    it seems to have worked out. Since the tale of his entire adulthood and
    working life remains to be told, it also suggests that this luminous
    book is only the first volume of memoirs we might expect >From him.

    Almost half of the book's page count is devoted to dozens of
    astonishing photos by Ara Guler. He deserves to be regarded as the
    Eugene Atget of Istanbul, and his cityscapes alone are worth the
    price of admission.

    They help make this book wonderfully evocative of a unique place -
    part "Arabian Nights," part Third World trash heap, part first world
    capital.

    * Keith Monroe lives in Greensboro, N.C.
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