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The museum of innocence by orhan pamuk
The museum of innocence by orhan pamuk













the museum of innocence by orhan pamuk

A rather contrived climax is redeemed by a witty dénouement in which a new narrator makes an unexpected appearance.Īnother richly woven tale suffused with life and color from one of contemporary fiction’s true master craftsmen.Ī flabby, fervid melodrama of a high-strung Southern family from Conroy ( The Great Santini, The Lords of Discipline), whose penchant for overwriting once again obscures a genuine talent. It’s also too long and sometimes seems more a willed production than a cry from the heart. Suggestions of a tradition-bound haute bourgeoisie unable to let go of passing traditions and values feel honestly earned, and the narrative consistently engages and surprises.

the museum of innocence by orhan pamuk

The author examines Kemal’s twisted devotion with impressive cunning and inventiveness inevitably, we think of Nabokov’s Humbert Humbert and his Lolita, but to Pamuk’s credit, the comparison does not diminish this novel’s eloquence or impact. During that period, Kemal is a frequent visitor to their home, from which he steals something each time, adding objects to his “collection” of artifacts commemorating ecstasies shared with his former lover (hence the compelling title metaphor). Not so with Kemal, whose yearning for the elusive Füsun (she’s responsive only sexually) outlasts the breaking of his engagement and the years of Füsun’s marriage to Feridun. The Basmacis are privileged people who acquire objects of beauty and value, store them away, then forget them.

the museum of innocence by orhan pamuk

When we meet him in 1975, Kemal is the 30-year-old scion of a prosperous Istanbul family. This is protagonist Kemal’s impassioned tale of his obsessive love for a beautiful distant relative, Füsun, with whom he enjoys a rapturous sexual relationship as the day of Kemal’s marriage to his blameless fiancée Sibel draws nearer.

the museum of innocence by orhan pamuk

Curious and demanding new novel from Turkey’s 2006 Nobel laureate, both closely akin to and somewhat less accomplished than its universally acclaimed predecessors ( Snow, 2004, etc.).















The museum of innocence by orhan pamuk