Fermer les détails sur les cookies

Ce site utilise des témoins. En apprendre plus à propos des témoins.

OverDrive désire utiliser des fichiers témoins pour stocker des informations sur votre ordinateur afin d'améliorer votre expérience sur notre site Web. Un des fichiers témoins que nous utilisons est très important pour certains aspects du fonctionnement du site, et il a déjà été stocké. Vous pouvez supprimer ou bloquer tous les fichiers témoins de ce site, mais ceci pourrait affecter certaines caractéristiques ou services du site. Afin d'en apprendre plus sur les fichiers témoins que nous utilisons et comment les supprimer, cliquez ici pour lire notre politique de confidentialité.

Si vous ne désirez pas continuer, veuillez appuyer ici afin de quitter le site.

Cachez l'avis

  Nav. principale
A Strangeness in My Mind
Couverture de A Strangeness in My Mind
A Strangeness in My Mind
A Novel
Emprunter Emprunter
From the Nobel Prize winner and acclaimed author of My Name is Red comes a modern epic novel that tells the coming of age story of a street vendor in Istanbul and the love of his life. 

Arriving in Istanbul as a boy, Mevlut Karataş is enthralled by both the old city that is disappearing and the new one that is fast being built. He becomes a street vendor, like his father, hoping to strike it rich, but luck never seems to be on Mevlut’s side. He spends three years writing love letters to a girl he has seen just once, only to elope by mistake with her sister. Although he grows to cherish his wife and the family they have together, Mevlut stumbles toward middle age as everyone around him seems to be reaping the benefits of a rapidly modernizing Turkey. Told through the eyes of a diverse cast of characters, in A Strangeness in My Mind Nobel-prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk paints a brilliant tableau of life among the newcomers who have changed the face of Istanbul over the past fifty years.
From the Nobel Prize winner and acclaimed author of My Name is Red comes a modern epic novel that tells the coming of age story of a street vendor in Istanbul and the love of his life. 

Arriving in Istanbul as a boy, Mevlut Karataş is enthralled by both the old city that is disappearing and the new one that is fast being built. He becomes a street vendor, like his father, hoping to strike it rich, but luck never seems to be on Mevlut’s side. He spends three years writing love letters to a girl he has seen just once, only to elope by mistake with her sister. Although he grows to cherish his wife and the family they have together, Mevlut stumbles toward middle age as everyone around him seems to be reaping the benefits of a rapidly modernizing Turkey. Told through the eyes of a diverse cast of characters, in A Strangeness in My Mind Nobel-prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk paints a brilliant tableau of life among the newcomers who have changed the face of Istanbul over the past fifty years.
Formats disponibles-
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB eBook
Langues:-
Copies-
  • Disponible:
    1
  • Copies de la bibliothèque:
    1
Niveaux-
  • Niveau ATOS:
  • Lexile Measure:
  • Niveau d'intérêt:
  • Difficulté du texte:


Au sujet de l’auteur-
  • ORHAN PAMUK won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2006. His novel My Name Is Red won the 2003 IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. His work has been translated into more than sixty languages.
Critiques-
  • Publisher's Weekly

    Starred review from August 24, 2015
    This mesmerizing ninth novel from Nobel laureate Pamuk (Silent House) is a sweeping epic chronicling Istanbul's metamorphosis from 1969 to 2012, as seen through the eyes of humble rural Anatolian migrant workers who come to the increasingly teeming metropolis in search of new opportunities in love and commerce. Though relayed through different points of view, the fable-like story's chief protagonist is the ruminative Mevlut Karatas, son of a cantankerous peddler of yogurt and boza (a thick, fermented wheat drink), who carries on his father's trade despite its fading popularity. The book includes a dip into Mevlut's childhood in Central Anatolia and his move to Istanbul with his father when he is 12. He later meets the beautiful Samiha at a wedding and is tricked by his cousin into eloping with Samiha's less attractive older sister, Rayiha. Mevlut and Rayiha have a happy marriage nonetheless and raise two daughters as he tries to gain a foothold in business. Mevlut's progression from naïve, perpetually searching wanderer to a more fulfilled and wizened soul, despite his mostly unsuccessful attempts at getting a leg up financially, is laid bare. His walkabouts and skirmishes with his family are engrossing, but what really stands out is Pamuk's treatment of Istanbul's evolution into a noisy, corrupt, and modernized city. This is a thoroughly immersive journey through the arteries of Pamuk's culturally rich yet politically volatile and class- and gender-divided homeland.

  • Kirkus

    Starred review from September 1, 2015
    Nobel laureate Pamuk (The Museum of Innocence, 2009, etc.) sets a good-natured Everyman wandering through Istanbul's changing social and political landscape. Tricked by his scheming cousin Suleyman into writing impassioned love letters for three years to Rayiha, Mevlut finds himself eloping with the older sister of the girl whose dark eyes intoxicated him at a relative's wedding. (Suleyman gave him the wrong name because he wanted the beautiful youngest for himself.) This being Turkey in 1982, and Mevlut being easygoing in the extreme, rejecting a woman who has compromised herself by agreeing to run away with him is unthinkable. The young couple prove to be well-matched and quite happy, although Mevlut doesn't make much money. His checkered day jobs in food services, selling rice with chickpeas from his own cart and ineffectually managing a cafe among them, give the author a chance to expatiate on Istanbul's endemic corruption, both municipal and personal. Pamuk celebrates the city's vibrant traditional culture-and mourns its passing-in wonderfully atmospheric passages on Mevlut's nightly adventures selling boza, a fermented wheat beverage he carries through the streets of Istanbul and delivers directly to the apartments of those who call to him from their windows. Although various characters from time to time break into the third-person narration to address the reader, this is the only postmodern flourish. If anything, Pamuk recalls the great Victorian novelists as he ranges confidently from near-documentary passages on real estate machinations and the privatization of electrical service to pensive meditations on the gap between people's public posturing and private beliefs. The oppression of women is quietly but angrily depicted as endemic; even nice-guy Mevlut assumes his right to dictate Rayiha's behavior (with ultimately disastrous consequences), while his odious right-wing cousin Korkut treats his wife like a servant. As Pamuk follows his believably flawed protagonist and a teeming cast of supporting players across five decades, Turkey's turbulent politics provide a thrumming undercurrent of unease. Rich, complex, and pulsing with urban life: one of this gifted writer's best.

    COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

  • Booklist

    Starred review from September 15, 2015
    Nobel laureate Pamuk's (The Museum of Innocence, 2009) profound love for his city, Istanbul, is the life force in this intricately detailed and patterned fairy-tale-like novel that follows the footsteps and life of a humble, contemplative street vendor. Mevlut leaves his village at age 12, in 1969, to join his father in Istanbul, where he ekes out a living selling yogurt door to door. As Mevlut comes into his own and finds deep meaning in the traditions of street peddling, especially his magical nighttime route selling boza, a fermented beverage he comes to believe is holy, he develops a mystical connection to the rhythms and secrets of the city, which lets you hide the strangeness in your mind inside its teeming multitudes. After catching a mere glimpse of the prettiest of three sisters (the eldest is married to his older cousin), Mevlut secretly courts her by writing poetic love letters, until, with a cousin's help, they elope. But there's a catch, a bit of treachery that infuses this many-voiced, multigenerational novel with subtle suspense. As his meditative hero walks the streets for five decades, balancing his wooden yoke on his shoulders, Pamuk, a deeply compassionate and poetic writer, illuminates dreadful and dazzling Istanbul's violent upheavals and ceaseless metamorphosis, women's struggles for freedom, and the strange vicissitudes of love. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Each new book by internationally revered Pamuk garners extensive media coverage and elevated reader interest.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

  • Library Journal

    Starred review from September 15, 2015

    Nobel Prize winner Pamuk has added another major work to his oeuvre with this carefully detailed and compassionately told tale of life in Istanbul over the last 60 years. Mevlut leaves his rural village as a child and moves to Istanbul to join his father in making a subsistence living as a street vendor. As he grows older, he falls for a girl he sees at a relative's wedding and spends years writing her long, passionate love letters. But when they elope, he discovers that his new wife is not the young woman to whom he has been writing. He and Rayiha have a long and blissfully happy marriage, but the deceptions related to the love letters reverberate throughout the novel. During their years together with their two daughters, they witness political turmoil, military coups, earthquakes, and rapid growth and upheaval as millions of new residents arrive and modern technologies change everything. In the end, Mevlut continues to sell boza at night, haunting the city like a voice from the past. VERDICT Although depicting a faraway land, the novel's central concerns are human nature, communication, and interpersonal relationships, and this great writer explores these themes with a universal warmth, wit, and intelligence. [See Prepub Alert, 4/20/15.]--James Coan, SUNY at Oneonta Lib.

    Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

  • Library Journal

    May 15, 2015

    Nobel Prize winner Pamuk's first novel since 2009's The Museum of Innocence (The Silent House was published here in 2012 but written in the 1980s), this work centers on 12-year-old Mevlut Karatas, who travels from Central Anatolia to Istanbul and survives by hawking a traditional Turkish drink called boza on the streets. He's so hapless he inadvertently marries the sister of a girl he loves, yet as he wanders the streets, enthralled by the city's glorious history and its booming future, he senses a satisfying "strangeness" that finally leads him to recognize what he's really wanted in life.

    Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

  • Library Journal

    September 15, 2015

    Nobel Prize winner Pamuk has added another major work to his oeuvre with this carefully detailed and compassionately told tale of life in Istanbul over the last 60 years. Mevlut leaves his rural village as a child and moves to Istanbul to join his father in making a subsistence living as a street vendor. As he grows older, he falls for a girl he sees at a relative's wedding and spends years writing her long, passionate love letters. But when they elope, he discovers that his new wife is not the young woman to whom he has been writing. He and Rayiha have a long and blissfully happy marriage, but the deceptions related to the love letters reverberate throughout the novel. During their years together with their two daughters, they witness political turmoil, military coups, earthquakes, and rapid growth and upheaval as millions of new residents arrive and modern technologies change everything. In the end, Mevlut continues to sell boza at night, haunting the city like a voice from the past. VERDICT Although depicting a faraway land, the novel's central concerns are human nature, communication, and interpersonal relationships, and this great writer explores these themes with a universal warmth, wit, and intelligence. [See Prepub Alert, 4/20/15.]--James Coan, SUNY at Oneonta Lib.

    Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

  • Publisher's Weekly

    April 4, 2016
    Reader Lee has a pleasing baritone voice and a slightly clipped British accent that’s easy to settle into. Fortunately, he doesn’t need to create numerous other voices, because even though the story is told from the perspective of multiple characters, they’re delineated clearly by the author in sections. The chief protagonist, Mevlut Karatas¸, sells boza (a thick, fermented wheat drink) in Istanbul. For more than four decades from 1969 to 2012, he walks the streets at night with a carrying pole on his shoulders, calling out his wares. We follow Mevlut’s through the years, from childhood to marriage, and walk with him through the poor, middle-class, and rich neighborhoods of the city. We watch Istanbul expand and diversify. Along with Mevlut, we struggle with the cultural, political, and religious evolutions that alter everyone’s lives. Nobel laureate Pamuk has written a lyrical ode to the city and the people he loves. Lee takes us on Pamuk’s wondrous journey through Istanbul, its people, places, and history. A Knopf hardcover.

Informations sur le titre+
  • Éditeur
    Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
  • OverDrive Read
    Date de publication:
  • EPUB eBook
    Date de publication:
Informations relatives aux droits numériques+
  • La protection des droits d'auteur (DRM) exigée par l'éditeur peut s'appliquer à ce titre afin d'en limiter ou d'en interdire la copie ou l'impression. Il est interdit de partager les fichiers ou de les redistribuer. Vos droits d'accès à ce matériel expireront à la fin de la période d'emprunt. Veuillez consulter l'avis important à propos du matériel protégé par droits d'auteur pour les conditions qui s'appliquent à ce contenu.

Status bar:

Vous avez atteint votre limite d'emprunt.

Accédez à votre page Emprunts pour gérer vos titres.

Close

Vous avez déjà emprunté ce titre.

Vous souhaitez accéder à votre page Emprunts?

Close

Limite de recommandations atteinte.

Vous avez atteint le nombre maximal de titres que vous pouvez recommander pour l'instant. Vous pouvez recommander jusqu'à 0 titres tous les 0 jours.

Close

Connectez-vous pour recommander ce titre.

Recommandez à votre bibliothèque qu'elle ajoute ce titre à la collection numérique.

Close

Plus de détails

Close
Close

Disponibilité limitée

La disponibilité peut changer durant le mois selon le budget de la bibliothèque.

est disponible pendant jours.

Une fois que la lecture débute, vous avez heures pour visionner le titre.

Close

Permission

Close

Le format OverDrive de ce livre électronique comporte ne narration professionnelle qui joue pendant que vous lisez dans votre navigateur. Apprenez-en plus ici.

Close

Réservations

Nombre total de retenues:


Close

Accès restreint

Certaines options de formatage ont été désactivées. Il est possible que vous voyiez d'autres options de téléchargement en dehors de ce réseau.

Close

Bahreïn, Égypte, Hong Kong, Iraq, Israël, Jordanie, Koweït, Liban, Mauritanie, Maroc, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Arabie saoudite, Soudan, République arabe syrienne, Tunisie, Turquie, Émirats arabes unis, et le Yémen

Close

Vous avez atteint votre limite de commandes à la bibliothèque pour les titres numériques.

Pour faire de la place à plus d'emprunts, vous pouvez retourner des titres à partir de votre page Emprunts.

Close

Limite d'emprunts atteinte

Vous avez emprunté et rendu un nombre excessif d'articles sur votre compte pendant une courte période de temps. Essayez de nouveau dans quelques jours.

Si vous n'arrivez toujours pas à emprunter des titres au bout de 7 jours, veuillez contacter le service de support.

Close

Vous avez déjà emprunté ce titre. Pour y accéder, revenez à votre page Emprunts.

Close

Ce titre n'est pas disponible pour votre type de carte. Si vous pensez qu'il s'agit d'une erreur contactez le service de support.

Close

Une erreur inattendue s'est produite.

Si ce problème persiste, veuillez contacter le service de support.

Close

Close

Remarque: Barnes & Noble® peut changer cette liste d'appareils à tout moment.

Close
Achetez maintenant
et aidez votre bibliothèque à GAGNER !
A Strangeness in My Mind
A Strangeness in My Mind
A Novel
Orhan Pamuk
Choisissez un des détaillants ci-dessous pour acheter ce titre.
Une part de cet achat est destinée à soutenir votre bibliothèque.
Close
Close

Il ne reste plus d'exemplaire de cette parution. Veuillez essayer d'emprunter ce titre de nouveau lorsque la prochaine parution sera disponible.

Close
Barnes & Noble Sign In |   Se connecter

Sur la prochaine page, on vous demandera de vous connecter à votre compte de bibliothèque.

Si c'est la première fois que vous sélectionnez « Envoyer à mon NOOK », vous serez redirigé sur une page de Barnes & Noble pour vous connecter à (ou créer) votre compte NOOK. Vous devriez n'avoir qu'à vous connecter une seule fois à votre compte NOOK afin de le relier à votre compte de bibliothèque. Après cette étape unique, les publications périodiques seront automatiquement envoyées à votre compte NOOK lorsque vous sélectionnez « Envoyer à mon NOOK ».

La première fois que vous sélectionnez « Send to NOOK » (Envoyer à mon NOOK), vous serez redirigé sur la page de Barnes & Nobles pour vous connecter à (ou créer) votre compte NOOK. Vous devriez n'avoir qu'à vous connecter une seule fois à votre compte NOOK afin de le relier à votre compte de bibliothèque. Après cette étape unique, les publications périodiques seront automatiquement envoyées à votre compte NOOK lorsque vous sélectionnez « Send to NOOK » (Envoyer à mon NOOK).

Vous pouvez lire des publications périodiques sur n'importe quelle tablette NOOK ou dans l'application de lecture NOOK gratuite pour iOS, Android ou Windows 8.

Accepter pour continuerAnnuler