GoodReads Rating: 4.29/5
John and Joey are a young 
couple immersed in their local midwestern punk scene, who after 
graduating college sever all ties and move to a perverse and nameless 
northeastern coastal city. They drift in and out of art museums, 
basement shows, and derelict squats seemingly unfazed as the city slowly
 slides into chaos around them.
Late one night, forced out of their living space, John and Joey are 
driven to take shelter in a chain pharmacy before emerging to a city in 
full-scale riot. They find themselves the only passengers on a commuter 
train headed north, and exit at the final stop to discover the area 
entirely devoid of people. As John and Joey negotiate their future 
through bizarre, troubling manifestations of the landscape and a 
succession of abandoned mansions housing only scant clues to their 
owners’ strange and sudden disappearance, they’re also forced to 
confront the resurgent violence and buried memories of their shared 
past.
With incisive precision and a cool detachment, Simon Jacobs has 
crafted a surreal and spellbinding first novel of horror and intrigue.
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GoodReads Rating: 3.89/5
Galip is a lawyer living in 
Istanbul. His wife, the detective novel–loving Ruya, has disappeared. 
Could she have left him for her ex-husband or Celâl, a popular 
newspaper columnist? But Celâl, too, seems to have vanished. As Galip 
investigates, he finds himself assuming the enviable Celâl’s identity, 
wearing his clothes, answering his phone calls, even writing his 
columns. Galip pursues every conceivable clue, but the nature of the 
mystery keeps changing, and when he receives a death threat, he begins 
to fear the worst.
With its cascade of beguiling stories about Istanbul, The Black Book
 is a brilliantly unconventional mystery, and a provocative meditation 
on identity. For Turkish literary readers it is the cherished cult novel
 in which Orhan Pamuk found his original voice, but it has largely been 
neglected by English-language readers. Now, in Maureen Freely’s 
beautiful new translation, they, too, may encounter all its riches.
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GoodReads Rating: 3.56/5
A spellbinding tale of 
disparate yearnings – for love, art, power, and God – set in a remote 
Turkish town, where stirrings of political Islamism threaten to unravel 
the secular order; by the winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize for Literature.
From the acclaimed author of My Name Is Red comes a spellbinding tale
 of disparate yearnings–for love, art, power, and God–set in a remote 
Turkish town, where stirrings of political Islamism threaten to unravel 
the secular order.
Following years of lonely political exile in Western Europe, Ka, a 
middle-aged poet, returns to Istanbul to attend his mother’s funeral. 
Only partly recognizing this place of his cultured, middle-class youth, 
he is even more disoriented by news of strange events in the wider 
country: a wave of suicides among girls forbidden to wear their head 
scarves at school. An apparent thaw of his writer’s curiosity–a frozen 
sea these many years–leads him to Kars, a far-off town near the Russian 
border and the epicenter of the suicides.
No sooner has he arrived, however, than we discover that Ka’s 
motivations are not purely journalistic; for in Kars, once a province of
 Ottoman and then Russian glory, now a cultural gray-zone of poverty and
 paralysis, there is also Ipek, a radiant friend of Ka’s youth, lately 
divorced, whom he has never forgotten. As a snowstorm, the fiercest in 
memory, descends on the town and seals it off from the modern, 
westernized world that has always been Ka’s frame of reference, he finds
 himself drawn in unexpected directions: not only headlong toward the 
unknowable Ipek and the desperate hope for love–or at least a wife–that 
she embodies, but also into the maelstrom of a military coup staged to 
restrain the local Islamist radicals, and even toward God, whose 
existence Ka has never before allowed himself to contemplate. In this 
surreal confluence of emotion and spectacle, Ka begins to tap his 
dormant creative powers, producing poem after poem in untimely, 
irresistible bursts of inspiration. But not until the snows have melted 
and the political violence has run its bloody course will Ka discover 
the fate of his bid to seize a last chance for happiness.
Blending profound sympathy and mischievous wit, Snow illuminates the 
contradictions gripping the individual and collective heart in many 
parts of the Muslim world. But even more, by its narrative brilliance 
and comprehension of the needs and duties.
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