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Istanbul
Memories And The City
by Orhan Pamuk

Istanbul reviews
Critic Score
Metascore: 73 Metascore out of 100
User Score  
7.7 out of 10
based on 16 reviews
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how did we calculate this?
based on 4 votes
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The Istanbul native and acclaimed novelist offers a portrait of the Turkish city, combined with a memoir of his childhood.

Knopf, 400 pages
06/07/2005
$26.95

ISBN: 1400040957

Nonfiction
Biographies & Memoirs
Essays
Literary Criticism
Travel

What The Critics Said

All reviews are classified as one of five grades: Outstanding (4 points), Favorable (3), Mixed (2), Unfavorable (1) and Terrible (0). To calculate the Metascore, we divide total points achieved by the total points possible (i.e., 4 x the number of reviews), with the resulting percentage (multiplied by 100) being the Metascore. Learn more...

Entertainment Weekly Jennifer Reese
Deeply serious yet often very funny, intellectually rigorous yet so personally revealing you may occasionally flinch, Pamuk's is the rare volume that keeps you spellbound right up to the perfect, brutal hammer stroke of the last sentence.
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Daily Telegraph Noel Malcolm
This evocative book succeeds at both its tasks. It is one of the most touching childhood memoirs I have read in a very long time; and it makes me yearn - more than any glossy tourist brochure could possibly do - to be once again in Istanbul.
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The Spectator Philip Mansel
[A] magnificent memoir.
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TLS: The Times Literary Supplement Nicholas Birch
The tour on offer here, dazzling though it is, is not so much of Istanbul as of Pamuk's efforts to mould it into a personal vision.
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Los Angeles Times Michael Frank
He fails to differentiate telling moments from trivial ones and illuminating memories from the merely remembered. That said, "Istanbul" is a rich and quirkily faceted portrait. [7 Aug 2005]
The Guardian Jan Morris
This is an irresistibly seductive book, and its seduction lies not in the author's self-portrait, but in his poetical identification with Istanbul.
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The New York Times Book Review Christopher de Bellaigue
Pamuk's achievement in ''Istanbul'' is to show the human damage done by Ataturk's revolution without succumbing to the benighted nostalgia of many Turkish Islamists.
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Publishers Weekly
This is a powerful, sometimes disturbing literary journey through the soul of a great city told by one of its great writers. [18 Apr 2005, p.54]
San Francisco Chronicle Sandip Roy
Even if you didn't know Orhan Pamuk as the author of acclaimed novels such as "Snow," even if you had no familiarity with Istanbul as a city, Pamuk's memoir, "Istanbul: Memories and the City," would still be a fascinating literary adventure.
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Kirkus Reviews
An engrossing tale of a city--and of an author as a young man. [1 Apr 2005, p.405]
Washington Post Alberto Manguel
This is the tense in which his book seems to be written, in a voice on the edge of reality, halfway between what he knows has happened and what he believes imaginatively to be true. This voice, this tone, this tense, is perfectly suited to describing melancholy.
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The Globe And Mail [Toronto] Byron Ayanoglu
Istanbul is highly worth reading for the pleasure (and the pain) of the sublimely beautiful images from a forgotten time. [2 Jul 2005, p.D5]
Boston Globe Elif Shafak
This is a masculinized, rationalized account of Istanbul that excludes the voices and stories that fall beyond this scope, including countercultures, women, folk Islam, and superstitions, all of which are crucial to Istanbul and have generated a restless urban dynamism.
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Library Journal Mari Flynn
Fans of Pamuk and his work will enjoy the well-written accounts of his eccentric upbringing, but others might find the multitude of reminiscences distracting. It is the city that is most intriguing. [15 May 2005, p.137]
Daily Telegraph David Flusfeder
Fans of Pamuk's fiction will be grateful for this book; travellers familiar with Istanbul will be stimulated; those unfamiliar with either may well be wearied.
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The Economist
Istanbul today is nothing like the place Mr Pamuk sketches. But then maybe it never was.
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What Our Users Said

Vote Now!The average user rating for this book is 7.7 (out of 10) based on 4 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

John E gave it a1:
The third book I have read of Orhan Pamuks. I fail to see the beauty in his writing though I keep giving him a chance becuase of all the hype. Difficult to follow, no real context or depth, filled with political confusion and the story does not come together at all, once again.

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