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La bastarda de Estambul
La bastarda de Estambul | Elif Shafak
Una novela que cabalga entre lo domstico y lo histrico y que evoca los colores, los aromas y la magia de las calles de Estambul. De la mano de una de las autoras turcas ms aclamadas internacionalmente llega esta novela sobre la historia de dos familias. Para Armanoush, recin llegada de Arizona en busca de sus races, Estambul es como un gran barco de ruta incierta. Acogida por la familia de su padrastro, esta joven armenia-norteamericana ir desgranando los secretos de dos familias unidas por la tragedia que separ a turcos y armenios a principios del siglo XX. Una apasionante saga familiar sobre uno de los episodios ms turbios de la historia de occidente: el tantas veces negado genocidio armenio.
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review
Texreader
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Pickpick

Armanoush (Amy), an American Armenian teen, travels to #Turkey to learn more about her family. She befriends Asya and her family of kooky but wonderful aunts—each of whom must come to grasps with Amy‘s harsh family‘s past due to the slaughter and ouster of Armenians. The book reveals a delicious commonality between the cultures: food. A bit of mysticism helps tell this story. Amy‘s broken family in America don‘t know she‘s made this trip. The ⬇️

Texreader underlying story back in America is good but I felt like there was a missed opportunity for a more meaningful conclusion to it. A good book I absolutely recommend, for the references to the food, the history of the Armenian genocide, or just a good story. #foodandlit 3mo
Catsandbooks ❤️🇹🇷 3mo
47 likes2 comments
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Texreader
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I finished this book last month and as I was going to write my review I remembered highlighting this from the author‘s notes. Unreal…

#Turkey #foodandlit @Catsandbooks

Catsandbooks 😱that's crazy! 3mo
35 likes1 comment
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Texreader
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I love that the entire recipe for ashure is in the book

#Turkey #foodandlit @Catsandbooks

Catsandbooks 🧑‍🍳🇹🇷 4mo
38 likes1 comment
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Texreader
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It has taken me NINE chapters to realize the chapters are all named after food! No wonder there are so many references to food in the story. And here I thought it was just another coincidence that I chose it for #foodandlit. Well, that was a coincidence. This was the perfect book for #foodandlit this month!! #Turkey @Catsandbooks

Catsandbooks How perfect! 4mo
47 likes1 comment
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Texreader
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Catsandbooks Mmm ❤️🇹🇷 4mo
39 likes1 comment
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Texreader
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Lots more food but I‘m going to have to look these up. #foodandlit #Turkey @Catsandbooks

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Texreader
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This is the perfect book for #foodandlit this month. There are continual references to food! #Turkey @Catsandbooks

Catsandbooks 😂❤️🇹🇷 4mo
38 likes1 comment
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Texreader
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50 likes1 stack add
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Lunakay
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Pickpick

Not an easy review, it has fantastic parts, it has weaker parts, it leaves some plot lines unresolved, which felt a bit frustrating.
Strongly recommend to check TWs, I didn't to avoid spoilers and the usual happend, I got hit by content I would have avoided otherwise, although I am sort of glad I read it.🙈
I loved the magical realism and of course the focus on food, so it was the perfect pick for #foodandlit Turkey 🇹🇷

@Catsandbooks @Texreader

Lunakay Also pictured: Little treasures from the Turkish store🇹🇷🤤 4mo
Texreader This is on my list to read this month. Thanks for the TWs. The food looks scrumptious 4mo
Catsandbooks ❤️🇹🇷 4mo
21 likes3 comments
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GatheringBooks
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Pickpick

#BookBinge Day 13: This one #InvolvesFuneral towards the end owing to a family curse. Paired with Turkish tea in Mado while in Istanbul 2 weeks back. As I noted in my review yesterday: “I would have to say that my reading of this novel had been significantly enriched by my being in Istanbul at the time that I was reading it.” More here: https://wp.me/pDlzr-pAz

Eggs 🫖 📚 🍪 1y
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Beautiful 😍 1y
56 likes2 comments
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GatheringBooks
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#SummerSpecial Day 27: I love the #LipsLipstick in this book cover. Paired with a pistachio coupe with baklava here in Mado, Istanbul. Reputed to have the best pistachio ice cream in the world according to my Turkish host back in 2015. 🍨

Karisa That looks delicious! 1y
Eggs 👄🤗💄 1y
60 likes2 comments
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GatheringBooks
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#SummerSpecial Day 25: #ThreadTheNeedle - the Armenian grandmother in this story loves knitting, making it the perfect title for today‘s prompt. Reading this while at the Bosphorus-Golden Horn sunset cruise while vacationing in Istanbul with family right now. Arrived last Sunday and leaving for Bodrum in two days‘ time. 💕 My second visit in this beautiful city, first time was in 2015, but for work. Loving the city‘s vibe even more now. 💕

batsy I've been to Istanbul once, many years ago, but it stands out in memory as one of the most amazing places I've visited 💜 1y
BarbaraBB Such a beautiful city. Enjoy 💛 1y
Eggs Love everything about this photo🥰💦📚 1y
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Beautiful 😍 1y
59 likes4 comments
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Onioons
Bastard of Istanbul | Elif Shafak
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Loving this story of an extended Turkish-Armenian family despite their painful history. Wonderful characterisation, quirky contexts and genuine hurt spanning generations. About two-thirds through & hoping it ends as strongly as it began.

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MelHopton
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Pickpick

CW: incest. Really enjoyed this book. It took me a while, and the author builds up a lot of suspense by flitting between different eras. She used food as a way to title the chapters and also as a metaphor - food is a huge part of the story and each chapter has the title of an ingredient. The suspense led to a satisfying ending, but I am not convinced I have managed to figure out the interconnected family trees - part of the appeal of this!

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JenReadsAlot
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Eggs Well done 💜👌🏼💜 2y
41 likes1 comment
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Martta
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Loved the cover and thought that this might be a bit easier read than the other books I bought. Also the story sounds very interesting!

Here is a picture 4/4

Suet624 lovely cover 3y
Nag1 Just read this book. Love it 3y
17 likes2 comments
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Texreader
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I just bought this ebook from my tbr list

PhyllisH Ohh thanks for the sale notification. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👏🏻I just downloaded the book 3y
51 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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suvata
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Pickpick

This book weaves together the stories of two rival cultures, those of the Turks and the Armenians—peoples who haven‘t yet healed from the wound opened by the 1915 Armenian Genocide. Shafak uses the stories of two families—the Turkish Kazancis and the Armenian Tchakhmakchians—who live seemingly disparate lives on two different continents but are connected by a past that reveals how deeply interconnected these families and historical enemies are.

Texreader Excellent review 4y
54 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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BekaReid
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Pickpick

I enjoyed the relationship dynamics of the various women in this novel as well as being immersed in the food, aromas, and colors of Istanbul. The book was packed full of Turkish and Armenian culture and history, but it was also overwhelming and felt like too much may have been packed in without adequate time to fully explore it. But I recognize that this feeling also may just be due to my lack of knowledge in the history.

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CortexVortex
Bastard of Istanbul | Elif Shafak
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Panpan

I really wanted to like this book. I grew up in Istanbul, where the Armenian genocide is still taboo. I appreciate Shafak's courage to pen the untouchable but the book wasn't well-crafted. It seems she wrote with a thesaurus nearby to sound impressive but her word choices didn't always fit and the prevalence of meandering backstories made the book clunky. I think she needed a good editor.

Maria514626 I wanted to like this one, too. Just couldn‘t do it. 😔😔😔 The story had such possibilities. (edited) 4y
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Huda_Q
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No matter how much weight you gained, your ears remain exactly the same , always loyal #elifshafak #the_bastard_of_istanbul

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Abailliekaras
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Pickpick

I really enjoyed this rich novel set in Istanbul. Shafak explores Turkish history through rebellious Asya and her family. Layered with textures, food and strong women. I loved the diverse, eccentric characters, the chaos & push-pull dynamics of family life & the humour. Shows the complexity of Turkish-Armenian relations & the importance of listening. Not as fluid & pared back as 10 Minutes but still excellent. Up now on Books On The Go. 🎧

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squirrelbrain
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Pickpick

I loved most of this book, with it‘s evocative descriptions of Istanbul, and I enjoyed getting to know all of the women who make up this story of two families, one Turkish and one Armenian.

There were just one or two parts where I thought ‘really?!‘ and I didn‘t like the way the two stories ‘linked together‘ at the end but that didn‘t spoil the overall experience.

TW for rape

#readingeurope2020 #turkey

Librarybelle Pretty cover! 4y
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BookNerdMama
Bastard of Istanbul | Elif Shafak
Pickpick

Holy. Guac. Omole. This is an incredible read. The story is compelling, with a twist at the end that even this experienced mystery reader did not see coming. Equally well-crafted is the commentary on collective memory and forgetting, and the place of memory among oppressed populations versus their historical oppressors.

Just read this book.

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Lindy
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Pickpick

A warm, shrewd and satirical novel about Turkish and Armenian culture and identity, told through a large cast of eccentric—yet believable—women in Istanbul. Satirical and a touch mystical, with lots of witty dialogue, plus serious undercurrents: repercussions of past criminal acts that reverberate through to the present. An engrossing #audiobook narrated by Laural Merlington.

Hooked_on_books She‘s a stunning woman. Isn‘t this one on the Booker list? 5y
Lindy @Hooked_on_books Shafak is stunning, agreed. Her most recent book is on the Booker list: 5y
TrishB Great review 👍🏻 5y
See All 7 Comments
Cathythoughts Reading Three Daughters of Eve for #lmpbc , my first book of hers to read. Very different- very good 👍🏻 (edited) 5y
JazzFeathers Needs!!! 5y
Lindy @TrishB 😘 5y
Lindy @JazzFeathers 😊👍 5y
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Lindy
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Sometime ago I got hooked on Johnny Cash and that was it. Ever since then I stopped listening to anything else. I like Cash. He depresses me so deeply I am not depressed anymore.

Suet624 I think I understand that last sentence. 😂 5y
Lindy @Suet624 Me too, but I had to rewind the audio playback and listen to it again. 😆 5y
marleed I have a playlist named PlainPathetic filled with beyond sad, downright pathetic songs. Sometimes that just makes me happy! 5y
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Lindy @marleed Yes, it‘s interesting how that works, isn‘t it. 5y
andrew61 Gosh i have all the late cd's which i haven't listened to for a while but think i should as i love his voice. Is it a bit bit daft but what is the connection with the book? I've seen mixed reviews for her booker nominated new one?! 5y
Lindy @andrew61 Asya, the title character in this novel, is the source of the quote that I posted. She‘s Turkish and the only music she listens to is by Johnny Cash. Maybe the author is using this quirk to draw a connection between Turks and Americans. 5y
46 likes6 comments
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Lindy
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I‘m home from my latest travels. My eyes are drooping so I think I will be going right to sleep instead of reading. 😴

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Lindy
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Asya: “Haven‘t you ever heard of a vegetarian?”
Zehila: “Of course I have. But do not forget, my dear, that you are a Kazanca, not a vegetarian.”

(I‘ve shortened the text to include just this part of the exchange between 18-year-old Asya and her aunt Zehila. I love Shafak‘s use of humour in her characterizations.)

AlaMich I‘ve seen those in the grocery store...that is a wacky vegetable!! 5y
Lindy @AlaMich Romanesco is a showstopper, isn‘t it? 5y
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sophierayton
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Pickpick

I've not read much fiction based in Turkey, so it was good to learn about it's history and the links with Armenians.
There are loads of strong, diverse, female characters in this book and the men who appear are all unlikable in one way or another. I don't know if that is what the author is going for in general, or if that's just the way the characters worked out in this book.

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Redwritinghood
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Mehso-so

The writing in this one was great, but the story fell flat for me. It was both too much and too little. There was a lot of extraneous material as it seemed like the author was in love with this Turkish family and just wanted to tell us all about them. There could have been more focus on the relationship of the characters and the Armenian genocide. I felt it wasn‘t sufficiently woven into the story, except for some coincidental plot points. 3⭐️

Redheadrambles I am interested in how you think this one compares to 10 minutes- when you get to that one. 5y
BiblioLitten I gave it three stars too when I read it long back. Read and forget. 😊 5y
64 likes2 stack adds2 comments
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MaGoose
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1. Road trip around the US
2. Secretary at a county jury commission
3. American Quartet by Warren Adler
4. The Dagger by Pam Anders
5. @whatsthEStorey @wanderinglynn @Betty

@Eggs #wondrouswednesday

wanderinglynn Thanks for the tag! ☺️ 6y
Eggs Thanks for joining in 💗🎉👏🏻 6y
39 likes2 comments
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Zanzoon33

Once there was; once there wasn't. God's creatures were as plentiful as grains and talking too much was a sin, for you could tell what you shouldn't remember and you could remember what you shouldn't tell.

AlwaysForeverReading Welcome to Litsy!!!💜❤️💙 6y
23 likes1 stack add1 comment
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sesealyah
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Just started this last night and I can already tell it‘s going to be a new favorite!! #currentlyreading #librarybooks

RaimeyGallant A belated welcome to Litsy! #LitsyWelcomeWagon Some of us put together Litsy tips to help new Littens navigate the site. It's the link in my bio on my page in case you need it. Or if you prefer how-to videos, @chelleo put some together at the link in her bio. @LitsyWelcomeWagon 6y
Chelleo Welcome! 6y
Eggs Welcome to Litsy 🤓🎈👋🏻 6y
See All 10 Comments
StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego Welcome to Litsy 📖💙 6y
Wife Welcome to Litsy!🌹 6y
Jess7 Welcome to Litsy! 📖 6y
Lel2403 Welcome to Litsy 6y
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Welcome to Litsy!! 6y
CoffeeNBooks Welcome to Litsy! 🎉 6y
CarolynM Welcome to Litsy 🌼 6y
11 likes10 comments
review
bookandcat
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Pickpick

#backpackeurope travelogue *fictional*
Country 60: Turkey (repeat) to catch my flight home to the US. I've had a wonderful time in Europe! This time in Turkey, I relaxed at some Turkish baths and shopped for some last minute souvenirs at the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul.
One discovery this trip is the author Elif Shafak - I read her 2x this trip. Wonderful writer. I'm glad I learned more about the Armenian genocide, as it was a plot point here.
3.5/5

Crazeedi I've read a few books on the genocide of the Armenians, will have to get this. Sounds like you had a glorious time 6y
bookandcat @Crazeedi it isn't the main plot point of the book but it is a major one! Passage to Ararat was also a good book about the topic. And yes, this has been a delightful reading challenge! Hard work but delightful! 6y
bookandcat @jenp @bookwormm forgot to tag you in this post (Istanbul, repeat, to fly home) 6y
Linsy Beautiful! 💜💜💜 6y
bookandcat @Linsy thanks! Shout-out to pic collage for their image search LOL 6y
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mhillis
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Made progress on my book for #backpackeurope today. After Turkey, I‘m heading back home to Japan!

Libby1 I love trying to pronounce that name. 6y
59 likes1 comment
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Aimeesue
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Quote from NPR's TED Talks podcast, not the tagged book. Both are worth your time.
What are some of your favorite books about lives and worlds that are very different from yours?

Izai.Amorim I like Murakami because he shows you Japanese culture so well - and it‘s such a different worldview. 6y
Aimeesue @Izai.Amorim I LOVE finding new perspectives on things! 6y
29 likes2 comments
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BiblioLitten
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The blurb says the book is powerful, and whimsical. I doubt that but it's entertaining nevertheless. Read and forget.

#ReadingResolutions
@Jess7
#photochallenge #foreigncountry
#istanbul

Tanisha_A The cover is beautiful for sure! 🙂 7y
Tamra That‘s a good description for a new category: read & forget. I like it. 7y
BiblioLitten @Tamra like a movie...watch and forget or one-time watch.😊 7y
35 likes1 stack add5 comments
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diaryofbibliophile
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So it's actually not a good idea to judge a book by it's cover. Oh so slow

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JenP
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Pickpick

Well this book gets some really mixed reviews on GR but I mostly loved it. I‘m guessing the ending is what makes people feel very split.

Jam packed with characters, themes, and symbolism, this can be a confusing read. It centers on the past, present, and futures of two families: A Turkish family in Istanbul and an Armenian family in San Francisco. This is a story of, and about, women, their relationships, and their heritage. Amy 👇🏼

JenP Travels to Turkey to explore her Armenian roots and to understand how Turks allowed the massacre of millions of Armenians. She believes the past will help her find meaning and connection. Asya is a Turkish woman living in Istanbul and wants to forget about the past. The two women form a friendship and together they uncover family secrets. The descriptions are so vivid and beautiful. 7y
suvata It‘s on my TBR list 7y
JenP @suvata I hope you like it! 7y
See All 8 Comments
TorieStorieS I wish I had read this one for my Turkey book!! It sounds great! 7y
JenP @TorieStorieS I did really like it but wasn‘t a huge fan of the ending. Which book did you read again? I can‘t remember. 7y
TorieStorieS Ararat- should have looked at the description more closely- it turned into more of a horror story by the end! 7y
JenP @TorieStorieS oh 😬. Hopefully Peru brings a more enjoyable book for you then 😊 7y
TorieStorieS I‘m hoping so too!! 😊 7y
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JenP
Bastard of Istanbul | Elif Shafak
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This book is giving me some serious wanderlust! #readaroundtheworld #turkey

56 likes1 stack add
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JenP
Bastard of Istanbul | Elif Shafak
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I am going to try and read this before the end of the month for #readaroundtheworld #Turkey

Have you all finished your Turkey books? What did you read and did you like it? I‘ll post the next destination tomorrow and you can give you‘re recommendations.

Ole Yes, I‘ve read this one. Loved it! 7y
JenP @Ole I am loving it so far! 7y
BookwormM I read Memed my Hawk and really enjoyed it. I also wanted to read Three Eves but the library let me down. 7y
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JenReadsAlot I planned on reading this, but the month got away from me! 7y
BookishMe Trying to complete other current reads so couldn't move to second Turkey read. Will get to Shafak books soon. I enjoyed my choice for being succinct yet emotional. 7y
tstan I read Honor by her, and loved it. I have this one on my shelf, too. 7y
Bks4Wrms I read this ⬆️ book and enjoyed it. 7y
batsy I'm reading My Name is Red. My first Pamuk, though I kind of skimmed this when I first bought it and remember nothing. I'm loving it; an immersive read that seems to set its own pace. 7y
Simona I finished Black book by Pamuk and I still collecting my thoughts... 7y
JenP @BookwormM great! I‘ll draft our read around the world post today and then you can drop in your review. I will also send you the voting points 😬 and monthly recap is in drafts for your pieces 7y
JenP @JenReadsAlot it‘s really good. I‘m almost done with it. 7y
JenP @BookishMe sounds good 7y
JenP @tstan you would like this one too 7y
JenP @Bks4Wrms glad to hear it! 7y
JenP @batsy I didn‘t love Snow. I liked it but not enough to be really motivated to read another of his for this month‘s challenge. I will look forward to your review of my Name is Red 7y
JenP @Simona i look forward to reading your thoughts! 7y
rockpools I read a daft cozy crime thing, largely because it was easy & available. It was fun, but I've been stacking everyone else's books for a later date. 7y
65 likes1 stack add18 comments
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TheAnitaAlvarez
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I was going to read but my mum hijacked me into helping with lunch. #ReadAroundTheWorld #Turkey @JenP

Bks4Wrms I just read this one for #ReadAroundTheWorld #Turkey. It was enjoyable. 7y
SandyW I guess you like your tea with lemon, as opposed to milk and sugar. 😝 7y
TheAnitaAlvarez @SandyW lemon and sugar, really. Sometimes milk, but it depends on my mood 7y
113 likes3 comments
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TheAnitaAlvarez
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This book is fascinating and I‘m loving it very much. #ReadAroundTheWorld #Turkey @JenP

SandyW I've been too busy for Litsy the last few days (horrors). I've missed the infusers! 7y
TheAnitaAlvarez @SandyW can you believe there‘s still infusers left? 7y
SandyW Ha. No... 😂 But I'm looking forward to more. 7y
117 likes3 stack adds3 comments
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TheAnitaAlvarez
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Loving this book so far, so a heart-shaped infuser is kinda appropriate. #ReadAroundTheWorld @JenP #Turkey

Mentallofilth Huge fan of Shafak, but I haven‘t read this one. Glad to hear it is good! 7y
TheAnitaAlvarez @Mentallofilth it‘s my first time with her and I‘m loving it 7y
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TheAnitaAlvarez
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Cute little duckling in my mug! Reading my February book for #ReadAroundTheWorld @JenP #Turkey

JenP So cute. Is that a tea strainer? 7y
TheAnitaAlvarez @JenP yes! Ain‘t it cute? 7y
JenP @TheAnitaAlvarez I love it!! 7y
See All 8 Comments
britt_brooke Cute! 7y
dixi_e How is it?? I‘ve been wanting to read this one. 7y
wanderlustforwords OMG! I liked your photo and had to go back as I-stopped and thought, “ is that a rubber duckies in the cup?” 😂😂😂 7y
rather_be_reading omg adorablr 6y
111 likes8 comments
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Maria514626
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Bailedbailed

Bailing on this one. I‘m half through and I don‘t care if I get back to it. Not a good sign.

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Maria514626
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Mehso-so

Half way through and this isn‘t holding my attention. Not sure why. Think I‘ll push a bit more and see if it clicks. I‘m not connecting with the characters and the Turkey/Armenia subplot seems so futile. (Confession: I‘m also reading Sand Castle Girls, about the Armenian genocide.) #tobailornottobail #turkey #armenia

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Maria514626
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So intrigued by this listen. Must not add another book to my currently reading pile until I finish one. #24in48 is coming at a good time. #readaroundtheworld #turkey

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Diyana
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Pickpick

4/5 💫 This IS a brave novel, having addressed the Armenian Genocide, religion, individual difference, sex, rape, conflicting interest in upholding cultures you wish you were not a part of or were a part of but you're heavily embracing and that tug of war between knowing the past and living without knowing (and wondering which would be better). This is the second best Elif Shafak novel I've read. I loved it more than The 40 Rules of Love.