This week we're pleased to offer a copy of the new paperback edition of Elif Shafak's The Bastard of Istanbul, which Booklist called "an intricate, vibrant saga," Kirkus called "outstanding" and and Library Journal called "both enlightening and entertaining." Here is Barry Unsworth in the Washington Post:
Recurrent throughout is the theme of past trauma and its effects in the present, the feeling of exile, the rooted sense of injustice, the rage at silence, the longing for a firm identity. Gradually the elements come together: the discussions online with fellow Armenians, the conversation of the strangely disembodied characters at the Café Kundera, the revelations of the evil djinn on Auntie Banu's left shoulder, and, above all, the friendship that develops between two girls from the different families. And we come to see that this need to confront the past, with all its load of error and guilt, is something that concerns not just Turks and Armenians but all of us, and that what is true between races and peoples is also true in individual lives. Throughout the novel, passing from one generation to the next, is a gold brooch in the shape of a pomegranate, a memorial to the unoffending victims and a symbol of continuity and reconciliation.
The rules, as always, as ever: Drop us an email, subject line "A RIGHT BASTARD" and you must, must, must include your full mailing address. Previous winners are ineligible. We will accept all emails until 8 p.m. PST and then it's off to the Random Number Generator to select a winner ... Until then.
UPDATE: Congratulations to Amber Hansford of Atlanta, GA.
This is the book that our baby sitter asked to borrow and that she has not brought back (yet). I suffer when I give my books away because I know that they might not come back. This, in particular, had a lovely hardback cover - and I haven't even read it!
Posted by: May | February 22, 2008 at 11:10 AM