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Turkish Immersion In 'The Bastard Of Istanbul'

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  • Turkish Immersion In 'The Bastard Of Istanbul'

    TURKISH IMMERSION IN 'THE BASTARD OF ISTANBUL'

    NPR - National Public Radio
    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php ?storyId=89309662
    April 10 2008

    NPR.org, April 10, 2008 · Two years ago, Turkish author Elif Shafak
    was tried for, and subsequently acquitted of, the crime of "insulting
    Turkishness." It's a charge that has been leveled against dozens of
    Turkish authors, and it's made some of them, including Shafak and
    Nobel winner Orhan Pamuk, minor celebrities in the West.

    But Shafak, who grew up internationally as the daughter of a single
    mother employed by Turkish embassies all over the world, is also a
    bestselling author in Turkey.

    Her novel, The Bastard of Istanbul, is steeped in the sights, colors
    and smells of Turkey's capital, and it grapples with the dark legacies
    of the country's Armenian genocide.

    But it's also a tender and spirited novel about women, including
    the title character, a headstrong Turkish teenage girl who adores
    Johnny Cash; her mother, a sexy matriarch who runs a tattoo parlor;
    and the Armenian-American woman with whom they share old blood.

    This is Shafak's sixth novel, and her second book written first in
    English. Shafak told the London Independent newspaper last year,
    "If it's sadness I'm dealing with, I prefer Turkish; for humor,
    I prefer English."

    This reading of The Bastard of Istanbul was recorded in February 2008
    at the Politics and Prose bookstore in Washington.

    Books Excerpt: 'The Bastard of Istanbul' by Elif Shafak

    Chapter 6: Pistachios

    Armanoush Tchakhmakhchian watched the cashier at A Clean Well-Lighted
    Place for Books pile the twelve novels she had just purchased one by
    one into a canvas backpack while they waited for her credit card to
    be processed. When finally given the receipt, she signed the paper,
    trying to avoid looking at the total. Once again she had spent all her
    monthly savings on books! She was a true bookworm, not a promising
    feature at all given that it had zero value in the eyes of boys and
    thus served to only further upset her mother about the prospects of
    her getting married to a moneyed husband. Just this morning on the
    phone her mother had made her promise not to whisper a word about
    novels when she went out tonight. Armanoush felt a surge of angst
    rise in her stomach as she though about her upcoming date.

    After a year of not going out with anyone-a solemn tribute to
    her twenty-one years of chronic singleness marked with disastrous
    pseudodates-finally today Armanoush Tchakhmakhchian was going to give
    love a try again.

    If her passion for books had been one fundamental reason behind
    her recurring inability to sustain a standard relationship with her
    opposite sex, there were two additional factors that had fanned the
    flames of her failure. First and foremost, Armanoush was beautiful-too
    beautiful. With a well-proportioned body, delicate face, dark blond,
    wavy hair, huge gray blue eyes and a sharp nose with a slight ridge
    that might seem a defect on others but on her only added an air of
    self-confidence, her physical attractiveness when combined with her
    brains intimidated young men. Not that they preferred ugly women,
    or that they had no appreciation for intelligence. But they didn't
    quite know where exactly to pigeonhole her: among the group of women
    they were dying to sleep with (the darlings), or among the group they
    sought advice from (the buddies), or among the group they wished to
    marry eventually (the fiancee types). Since she was sublime enough
    to be all at once, she ended up being none.

    The second factor was far more complicated but equally beyond her
    control: her relatives. The Tchakhmakhchian family in San Francisco
    and her mother in Arizona had antagonistically different views when
    it came to the question of who would be the right man for Armanoush.

    Since she had been spending almost five months here (summer vacation,
    spring break, and frequent visits over the weekends) and the remaining
    seven months in Arizona almost every year since she was a toddler,
    Armanoush had had the chance to learn firsthand what each side
    expected from her and how utterly irreconcilable those expectations
    were. Whatever made one side happy was bound to distress the other. In
    order not to upset anyone, Armanoush had tried to date Armenian boys
    in San Francisco and anyone but them when she was in Arizona. But
    fate must have been pulling her leg, because in San Francisco she
    had been attracted only to non-Armenians, whereas all three of the
    young men she had had a crush on while in Arizona turned out to be
    Armenian Americans, much to her mother's disappointment.

    Lugging her anxieties together with the heavy backpack, she crossed
    Opera Plaza while the wind whistled and wailed uncanny tunes to her
    ears. She caught sight of a young couple inside Max's Opera Cafe who
    were either disappointed with the piled-high corned beef sandwiches in
    front of them, or else had just had a quarrel. Thank God I'm single,
    Armanoush half jokingly thought to herself before she turned toward
    Turk Street. Years ago when she was still in her teens, Armanoush
    had shown the city to an Armenian American girl from New York. Upon
    reaching this street the girl's face had crumpled. "Turk Street! Aren't
    they everywhere?"

    Armanoush recalled her own surprise at the girl's reaction. She had
    tried to explain to her that the street was named after Frank Turk,
    an attorney who had served as second alcalde and was important in
    the city's history.

    "Whatever." Her friend had broken off the lecture, showing not too
    much interest in urban history. "All the same, aren't they everywhere?"

    Yes indeed, they were everywhere, so much so that one of them was
    married to her mom. But this last bit of information Armanoush had
    kept to herself.

    She avoided talking about her stepfather with her Armenian friends.

    She did not talk about him with non-Armenians either. Not even with
    those who had absolutely no interest in life outside of their own and
    therefore couldn't care less about the history of the Armenian-Turkish
    conflict. All the same, wise enough to know that secrets could spread
    quicker than dust in the wind, Armanoush maintained her silence. When
    you didn't tell anyone the extraordinary, everyone assumed the normal,
    Armanoush discovered at an early age. Since her mother was an odar,
    what could have been more normal for than to get married to another
    odar? This being the general assumption on the part of her friends,
    Armanoush's stepfather was thought to be an American, presumably from
    the Midwest.

    On Turk Street she passed by a gay-friendly bed-and-breakfast, a Middle
    Eastern grocery store, and a small Thai market, and she strolled next
    to pedestrians from all walks of life until she finally got on the
    trolley to Russian Hill. Leaning her forehead on the dusty window,
    she reflected on the "other I" in Borges's Labryinths as she watched
    the wispy fog drift up off the horizon. Armanoush too had another self,
    one that she kept at bay no matter where she went.

    Reprinted by arrangement with Penguin a member of Penguin Group (USA)
    Inc., from The Bastard of Istanbul by Elif Shafak. Copyright © 2007
    by Penguin

    --Boundary_(ID_WP525PQgZCJrDKFWgFXmMQ)--
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