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Ferit Orhan Pamuk (born 7 June 1952; Turkish pronunciation: [feˈɾit oɾˈhan paˈmuk] [1]) is a Turkish novelist, screenwriter, academic, and recipient of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Literature. One of Turkey's most prominent novelists, [ 2 ] he has sold over 13 million books in 63 languages, [ 3 ] making him the country's best-selling writer.
First edition (Turkish) Silent House (Turkish: Sessiz Ev) is Orhan Pamuk's second novel published in 1983 after Cevdet Bey and His Sons.The novel tells the story of a week in which three siblings go to visit their grandmother in Cennethisar, a small town near Istanbul.
The Museum of Innocence (Turkish: Masumiyet Müzesi) is a museum in a 19th-century house in Istanbul created by novelist Orhan Pamuk as a companion to his novel The Museum of Innocence. The museum and the novel were created in tandem, centred on the stories of two Istanbul families.
Istanbul: Memories and the City (İstanbul: Hatıralar ve Şehir) is a largely autobiographical memoir by Orhan Pamuk that is deeply melancholic. It talks about the vast cultural change that has rocked Turkey – the unending battle between the modern and the receding past. It is also a eulogy to the lost joint family tradition.
The Tuzla Armenian Children's Camp was the subject of an exhibit by the Turkish Human Rights Organization in 1996, the materials from which was published in book form in 2000, with a foreword by Orhan Pamuk and an afterword by Hrant Dink. [27]
The dynamic of the slave-master relationship is a recurring theme throughout The White Castle.Hoja, the master, tries to assume superiority over the narrator several times throughout the story, whether by ridiculing him for his childhood, or for his weakness and paranoia as a slave.
Courtesy of Zoe Saldana/Instagram Zoe Saldaña offered a rare glimpse of her personal life with photos of her three sons. The Avatar: Way of Water star, 45, shared a clip on Instagram on Friday ...
The Red-Haired Woman is a 2016 novel by Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk. [1] Alex Preston, writing in The Guardian, referred to the novel as "deceptively simple". [2] The novel was translated into English by Ekin Oklap. [3] An abridged translation was read on BBC Radio 4 in 2022. [4]