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Orhan Pamuk and Dog Son of Dog: Voices From the Other Side of the Bo

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  • Orhan Pamuk and Dog Son of Dog: Voices From the Other Side of the Bo

    Orhan Pamuk and Dog Son of Dog: Voices From the Other Side of the Border


    http://www.sabahenglish.com/entertainment/11170.html
    11 September, 2010

    A new American novel draws powerful parallels with Pamuk's Snow

    LOS ANGELES, Sept. 10 /PRNewswire/ -- In a forthcoming novel of ideas
    mirroring the breakneck paradigm shifts of the 21st century, Los
    Angeles writer Armen Melikian engages in a direct conversation with
    Turkish author Orhan Pamuk's Snow. Melikian's novel, titled Journey to
    Virginland, tackles a broad array of philosophical, religious,
    political, sexual, and gender issues discussed by Pamuk, and in a
    sense continues Snow's narrative on the other side of the border from
    Kars. Melikian's antihero, a modern day Diogenes called Dog,
    substantially widens the scope of the investigation which Pamuk's
    protagonist, Ka, has undertaken to expose a reactionary cultural
    milieu that has spawned an epidemic of suicides by young women.

    Melikian is a prodigious new voice in American literature. Commenting
    on his debut novel, Paul McCarthy, a professor of literature at Ulster
    University and a New York Times bestselling author, writes, "I am
    struck by the extraordinary writing, vision, and, perhaps rarest of
    all, originality of Journey to Virginland. In the best sense, I'm
    reminded of George Orwell's classics, and other authors of similar
    stature, though there is no true parallel possible with a novel as
    unique in concept and execution as Journey to Virginland."

    Pamuk's story takes place mostly in Turkey's Kars region; Melikian's
    novel unfolds in neighboring Armenia. Both societies have for
    centuries shared Ottoman rule. Both Melikian and Pamuk have been at
    turns acclaimed and ostracized in their homelands. Melikian lived in
    Armenia for three years before being exiled as a result of his
    devilishly iconoclastic writings.

    Yet Armenia is but a point of departure in Melikian's far-reaching
    critical compass. Soon enough, the reader is given a box seat before
    the seismic shifts of our times, the pivotal cultural and spiritual
    failures of a world held hostage to hypercapitalism, post-9/11
    realpolitik, and an ominous resurgence of nationalism and religious
    extremism.

    Journey to Virginland stands apart by the exhilarating paths of change
    which it proposes. Its dazzling scope, sheer storytelling prowess, and
    expansion of the novelistic endeavor as an artistic medium per se,
    establish this novel as a rare literary enterprise.

    For more information about Orhan Pamuk's unexpectedly appearing and
    archetypal "double," whom Pamuk once searched for in Istanbul, or to
    get your copy of Journey to Virginland, visit
    www.JourneyToVirginland.com

    SOURCE Armen Melikian




    From: A. Papazian
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