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...But the Keskin family is make-believe, summoned from the imagination of Orhan Pamuk, the Turkish Nobel Prize-winning author and the museum’s creator, to whose 2008 novel, which shares its name, the building...
...“Nights of Plague” by Orhan Pamuk is published by Faber. His responses were translated by Ekin Oklap Follow @FTMag to find out about our latest stories first...
...The very first page introduces the near-untranslatable Bulgarian word for a deep, heavy sadness, taga — an echo of Vladimir Nabokov’s toska in Russian or Orhan Pamuk’s hüzün in Turkish — to make the larger...
...Orhan Pamuk has had a special bond with the owner of Mavi, a restaurant on the Istanbul island of Heybeliada, ever since she got him out of a tight spot almost 20 years ago....
...I’m afraid I cringed reading parts of the FT interview with Orhan Pamuk (Lunch with the FT, September 17). The parts about the menu and the cat provided relief and a sense of place....
...A wry meditation on nationalism and identity, on history and myth, on science and superstition, delivered with Orhan Pamuk’s trademark storytelling flair....
...Orhan Pamuk, the Turkish winner of the 2006 Nobel literature prize, put it brilliantly in Istanbul: Memories and the City, when he reflected on the transition from empire to republic....
...(His glass is preserved in a vitrine, reminiscent of those in the Museum of Innocence, founded by the writer Orhan Pamuk as an adjunct to his 2008 novel of the same name, a profoundly thought-provoking meditation...
...Orhan Pamuk, a Nobel laureate widely seen as Turkey’s greatest living writer, told the Financial Times he approved of the government’s push for a name change....
...Orhan Pamuk is still under investigation for offending in his recent novel Nights of Plague....
...by Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk....
...His novels call to mind the work of China’s Yan Lianke, Peru’s Mario Vargas Llosa and Turkey’s Orhan Pamuk....
...However, given the setting and the needs of this piece, I have invited the writer Orhan Pamuk, who can tell us why Turks are such a melancholy people (his book Istanbul is all about that), and my favourite...
...Thayil writes about his city with the kind of deep affinity and close attention that Orhan Pamuk displays in his novels set in Istanbul....
...In 2006, they took aim at Orhan Pamuk, Turkey’s much-celebrated novelist. He was accused of “insulting Turkishness” in a newspaper interview in which he spoke of the 1m Armenians who died in the war....
...Orhan Pamuk (Sunday, 10.30pm, BBC1) is the dogged Alan Yentob, trying valiantly to keep up on every level with this sophisticated, slippery intellect....
...Pamuk, as well as the estates of Vladimir Nabokov, Albert Camus and Philip Roth....
...The show, then, is not a Museum of Innocence in the sense of the Turkish Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk’s recreation of the world of his fiction....
...The Red-Haired Woman , by Orhan Pamuk, translated by Ekin Oklap, Faber, RRP£16.99/Knopf, RRP$26.95 “The more I remember, the deeper I fall into it,” says Cem, the novel’s protagonist, reflecting on memory...
...Orhan Pamuk’s ‘The Red-Haired Woman’ is published by Faber Photograph: Furkan Temir...
...Istanbul-born Orhan Pamuk uses his city’s creep as the topography for his new novel; unstable memory is its shifting landscape....
...Internationally, it is best known as the desolate setting for Snow by Orhan Pamuk, the Turkish Nobel laureate....
...Pamuk and Sarah Dunant....
...Are the books that we get a chance to read — the novels by Orhan Pamuk or Roberto Bolaño or Elena Ferrante — really the best, most original books written in their languages?...
...Last month, author and Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk said Hurriyet withheld an interview with him in which he said he would be voting No....
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