

Ninth impression hardcover with unclipped dust jacket, in very good condition. From the private collection of Dame Carmen Callil, publisher, writer, critic and founder of Virago Press. Jacket edges are a little creased. Board spine ends are slightly bumped. Light marks on some of the pages towards the rear. Binding is sound and pages are otherwise clear. LW Review: A Modern Scheherazade - I "discovered" Elif Shafak two or three years ago and have read a couple of her books each year since. While I find myself less and less interested in fiction these days (perhaps because much of it isn't great?), I have loved every book of hers that I've read. Even her less-than-best writing is wonderful. Why? She is a phenomenally gifted storyteller; her characters are genuine even when they are far from normal; and her ability to take the reader to a different place and time is dazzling. In this book, the characters of Tequila Leila and her friends are so beautifully drawn (and they are definitely not "normal"), and the city of Istanbul is brilliantly depicted, including great beauty and a large dose of less-then-beautiful as well. The story is beyond engrossing, and the ending is perfect. Ms. Shafak is nothing less than a modern Scheherazade; how lucky we are to have her! Review: It’s worth the read and the tears - Cried several time reading this book; it was beautifully written. Between the flash back and the present, it really does show you that we don’t always choose our family, sometimes they are chosen for us.







| Best Sellers Rank | #1,592,129 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 12,465 Reviews |
R**M
A Modern Scheherazade
I "discovered" Elif Shafak two or three years ago and have read a couple of her books each year since. While I find myself less and less interested in fiction these days (perhaps because much of it isn't great?), I have loved every book of hers that I've read. Even her less-than-best writing is wonderful. Why? She is a phenomenally gifted storyteller; her characters are genuine even when they are far from normal; and her ability to take the reader to a different place and time is dazzling. In this book, the characters of Tequila Leila and her friends are so beautifully drawn (and they are definitely not "normal"), and the city of Istanbul is brilliantly depicted, including great beauty and a large dose of less-then-beautiful as well. The story is beyond engrossing, and the ending is perfect. Ms. Shafak is nothing less than a modern Scheherazade; how lucky we are to have her!
K**R
It’s worth the read and the tears
Cried several time reading this book; it was beautifully written. Between the flash back and the present, it really does show you that we don’t always choose our family, sometimes they are chosen for us.
M**S
Stunning!
“10 Minutes and 38 Seconds in This Strange World”, by Elif Shafak, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 2019, and won several “Book of the Year” prizes; I can see why! What a wonderfully unique and exceptional novel. You know that old saying when people recount a near-death experience: “My Whole Life Passed Before My Eyes!” Well this is the story of the 10 minutes and 38 seconds after “Tequila” Leila, a prostitute in Istanbul, has been murdered and left in a dumpster. Her dying brain recalls her whole life in those minutes. We learn how she got where she is, and we learn about the lives of her five best friends, and we learn a lot about what being a female in Turkey was like in the 1950s through 1990 (spoiler alert: not great). The last third of the novel is about Leila’s five friends and how they intend to honor her after her death. It’s a beautiful (and thrilling!) story of friends who become family. This unusual structure for a “flash-back” story worked incredibly well! Leila’s life, though full of horrific abuses and some plain bad luck, was also full of loving and loyal friends. I highly recommend this fascinating and beautifully written award-worthy novel.
J**K
What a prosaic author
There is so much filled in this tale of fiction that weaves so much history, and sadness- particuarly when one realizes this area from which the author has set the scenery- a land that was somewhat a meeting of two worlds, where warlords usurped people who had been there for centuries and built something else; alongside a faith- one gets a peak into the window- istanbul. Her story crafts for the western reader a reality not known, a harshness of a male oriented society - people in the west thing they have it bad- but even where prostitutes have rights- its not anywhere on the scale of where this story is set. Being a historical buff; her stories echoes the sentiments of tragedy- tragedy is a symptom of such dogma and that dogma entrenched is where the protagonist is. It is the most unfortunate thing to be born a women in the middle of the east asia, most certainly, where nomads and warlords of unspeakable cruelty removed greek civilization and built something else- but this tale is superb, and crafted so well. I think this is her best book. I am starting to read the others- Turkey besides the Azeri state- locks up a significant amount of journalism, so pleasant to read her insights crafted into fiction but truth underlying the dark belly of the holy piety of this city so attributed, but so far from attained . She is a great author with full of similes and metaphors and deep insight. This was a joy to stumble upon.
P**I
a short, tragic life
This novel begins with the main character, Leila, having been murdered and thrown in a dumpster in Istanbul. Before her brain completely dies, she thinks back on her short life—as a sexually abused teenager, as a prostitute, as a friend, and as a wife. The second half of the book focuses on her five special friends who proceed to honor Leila in death. Several themes are at work here, but the one that struck me the most was that of the contradictions within any religion’s set of beliefs. Hypocrisy among religious zealots apparently is common there as well. For example, Leila’s father has two wives, but Islam prohibits polygamy. In Turkey, corruption and reactionary laws reinforce the limitations placed on the lives of Leila and her misfit friends, including a transgender woman and a dwarf. A character who surfaces near the end of the book is a gay young man being forced into an arranged marriage. His outcome is one of the few bright spots in this novel, and, although it is beautifully written, this novel does not offer hope for Turkey’s progress. Leila’s friends mount sort of a minor rebellion against the treatment of Leila’s corpse, but it will have no impact on the country’s modus operandi, in which the deaths of prostitutes are not really cause for concern by law enforcement or by the general public. When it becomes clear that a serial killer is on the loose, targeting prostitutes, the authorities advise “normal” women not to panic. If a society is judged by its treatment of women, this novel indicates that Turkey has much room for improvement.
S**R
A unique perspective on a life viewed in those few minutes following an unexpected death
Set in Istanbul, this is the story of Leila who leads a difficult life brightened by love and friendship. A great read with a hopeful ending.
D**E
This is not a downer about death...it is a beautiful book about tenacity, love, and compassion
This is a stunningly lyrical, yet down-to-earth elegy to a woman, Leila, who grew up mired in a society rife with oppression and injustice toward women (as so many are), but who would let the painful circumstances of her life break or embitter her. In the 10 minutes and 38 seconds after she has been murdered (no spoiler here; the book opens with this), her final lingering thoughts and memories bring to life the story a girl who whose fate was sealed, simply by being borne a female in a extremely patriarchal culture that relegated women to being breeders and handmaidens, unless they dared to escape, at their own peril. Leila's last few memories of her life's trajectory until that moment in time in turn brings to life the many women who were her devoted friends. Like Leila, they had faced hardships, oppression, and ostracism, and followed paths that led them to their destinies and to each other. They found their place in a treacherous world and made the most of it. Leila and every one of these women (and one man who never forgot or stopped loving his childhood friend), and the city and culture they live in, are brought to vivid life. They have all suffered and struggled, they have all been living on the edge, and in a chronic state of dodging danger, deprivation, dejection, and rejection. But they were all wonderful and brave in their own right, and devoted to Leila and each other. The author fleshes out each character fully...each is imperfect, like all of us, scarred in different ways by the struggles and hardships they have faced..and always will face. But they are brimming with humanity, sass, and inner strength and that's what shines through. Now that I have finished the book, I will miss them all.
P**T
In Carrying Leila to the Afterlife, Water Proves Stronger than Blood
From the story’s four-word opening sentence introducing Leila until the penultimate chapter that closes with “free at last,” Shafak’s prose captivates with fluid transitions in time and milieu. Leila, is the primary actor in this alternatingly violent, loving, oppressive tale. In her dying minutes, Leila cannot complete her story without revealing each player who had a significant effect on the situations in which she found herself, the choices she made, and the risks she undertook. Each actor is fully developed with recognizable personalities, special backstories, and are richly presented in the individual space allotted. Some are not sympathetic characters. The few walk-ons are essential to advancing the plot. Seemingly, one special person is not given enough space; but, it proves to be a rational literary decision. The significant friends have dedicated chapters that explain their connections to Leila and each other. The entire book is extraordinary. When you start reading this book, you will not be able to close it to sleep, to eat, to breathe.
M**.
buena y cruda
buena, cruda,
T**.
Das Leben auf Istanbuls Straßen
Das Leben eines kleinen Mädchens, das von ihrem Onkel sexuell missbraucht wurde, von ihren Eltern im Stich gelassen wird und einer Zwangshochzeit entflieht, endet als Prostituierte. Ein Buch über die Grausamkeit der Gesellschaft und der Religion und zugleich über die Kraft und Liebe von Freunden. Eine traurige story und zugleich amüsant. Absolut empfehlenswert!
M**I
Bad product
Many pages aren’t printed, never experienced anything like it before
L**9
J'ai beaucoup aimé
Un très beau livre par cet auteur. Je ne suis jamais déçue par ses livres.
H**H
Top 10 books in the world
In my top 10 books
Trustpilot
1 week ago
2 months ago