- ISBN 978 0 7206 1310 0
- Fiction
- Paperback
- £11.95
- Available
The Idle Years
Orhan Kemal
With a foreword by Nobel Prize Winner, Orhan Pamuk
Orhan Kemal is one of Turkey's best-loved writers, with a standing equal
to Charles Dickens in England. These are the first two semi-autobiographical
novels in a series, set in the 1920s and 1930s when Turkey was undergoing
major social change. The unnamed narrator grows up in an affluent household
in an Adana village with his brother,two sisters, mother and formidable
father, a known political agitator, but the family are forced to migrate
to Beirut on account of his activities. The boy develops into a rebellious
and feckless teenager, reluctantly attempting to support his now impoverished
family through menial work while resenting his father's stern attempts
to control him. Eventually lack of money provokes him and his best friend
to set off for Istanbul to look for work. Before long he has developed into
an alienated and self-conscious adolescent, preoccupied by his scrawny appearance,
ragged clothes and lack of prospects — and he soon has to make a humiliating
return. The fact that his father is well born but notorious does not
help him make his way in the world and things begin to look up only when
he falls for a pretty young factory girl...
The most famous of Kemal's writings in Turkey, this is the first time that it
has been published in English and it features a foreword by 2006 Nobel Prize winner,
Orhan Pamuk.
ORHAN KEMAL (1914-1970) was born in Adana. His father worked in law and was active in politics, but Kemal dabbled in menial jobs before military service. His imprisonment due to his outspoken political views proved a turning point and from 1951 he made his living entirely by writing — often with radical, anti-authoritarian content. An institution in his homeland (though barely tolerated by successive governments), Kemal's untimely death in 1970 was an occasion for national mourning.'Suffused though they are with the dark realities of poverty, Orhan Kemal's novels are celebrations of this other world. The optimism I find in them comes not from literature but from life itself.' - Orhan Pamuk