The Red-Haired Woman

(Author)
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Product Details
Price
$16.00  $14.88
Publisher
Vintage
Publish Date
Pages
272
Dimensions
5.2 X 8.0 X 0.9 inches | 0.6 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781101974230

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About the Author
Orhan Pamuk won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2006. His novel My Name Is Red won the 2003 IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. His work has been translated into more than sixty languages.
Reviews
"Allusive, enchanting and perfectly controlled ... [Pamuk] is a weaver of tales par excellence." --The Wall Street Journal

"A parable about present-day Turkey. . . . It blends the close observation of details with the broad brushstrokes usually associated with myth-making and fables." --The Guardian

"An amazingly gifted writer." --NPR

"Beautifully written . . . a thoughtful consideration of Western and Eastern myths of fathers and sons, and the limits of free will." --Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

"Saturated with sympathy and sense of place. . . . This book sings with the power of diverse remembrance." --Financial Times

"Extraordinary. . . . The reader feel[s] as if they've emerged from the depths of a well into sudden and dazzling light." --The Observer

"Pamuk traces the disastrous effects of a Turkish teenager's brief encounter with a married actress, elaborating on his fiction's familiar themes: the tensions between East and West, traditional habits and modern life, the secular and the sacred." --The New York Times Book Review

"Story-telling at its finest. . . . There is nothing more rewarding than reading a work by a master craftsman at the top of his game, nothing else like it at all." --Counterpunch

"An ending that makes you immediately start the book all over again speaks for itself." --The Sunday Times (London)

"Quietly beautiful." --1843

"It can fall to fiction to remind us of what has come before . . . a tale of slow-reveal secrets [and] love." --Vogue

"The Red-Haired Woman drapes Turkey's political situation in the language of myth, suggesting that the ancient pairs of Oedipus and Laius and Sohrab and Rostam may have company in the present." --The New Yorker

"Engaging and deftly told. . . . Pamuk's postmodern puzzles are meticulous as ever." --Bookforum

"Absorbing . . . Pamuk's intense political parable tells us much about the plight of Turkey today." --Evening Standard (London)

"The allure that Pamuk evokes in this haunting tale of hardship, unrequited love, guilt, danger, dreams fulfilled and dreams destroyed is the stuff that Eastern literature tragedies are made of." --Bookreporter

"Pared down, written with deliberate simplicity. . . . Polyphonic narratives are replaced by a powerful, engaging clarity." --The Spectator

"Beautiful. . . . Pamuk masterfully contrasts East with West, tradition with modernity, the power of fables with the inevitability of realism." --Booklist (starred review)