Margins
The Few book cover
The Few
A Novel
2011
First Published
4.06
Average Rating
371
Number of Pages

-I am here. Where are you?- These desperate words link the two protagonists of Hakan Gunday's raw and fearless novel The Few. Derda is an eleven-year-old girl pulled out of boarding school by her mother who, without telling her, plans to sell her as a wife to a conservative tribesman. She goes with her new husband to London, where for five years he abuses and all but imprisons her. Even after escaping, Derda soon finds herself preyed upon by Londoners as well as other Turkish immigrants who have formed a criminal underworld. In a parallel story set in Turkey, Derda, an eleven-year-old boy, buries his dead mother in secret to avoid being taken to the state orphanage. Alone, he becomes with an illegal book printing operation. He finds himself obsessed with a Turkish novelist, who Derda grows convinced died because he felt misunderstood and unappreciated. Increasingly unstable, Derda targets two contemporary writers, whom he accuses of stealing the writer's fame. The Few is an unflinching story of the vulnerability of the world's youth when cultures, politics, and generations collide. In a time when countless refugees and children slip through the cracks, it is a powerful admonishment not to forget those who are helpless victims.

Avg Rating
4.06
Number of Ratings
6,391
5 STARS
41%
4 STARS
34%
3 STARS
18%
2 STARS
5%
1 STARS
2%
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Author

Hakan Günday
Hakan Günday
Author · 11 books

Hakan Günday was born in Rhodes in 1976. He finished his primary education in Brussels. After attending Ankara Tevfik Fikret High School, he studied at the Department of French Translator in the Faculty of Literature of Hacettepe University. He then transferred to Université Libre de Bruxelles. Günday continued his study in the Faculty of Political Sciences at Ankara University. He published his first novel, Kinyas ve Kayra, in 2000. He is also a playwright and working in cooperation with DOT company- İstanbul (http://go-dot.org/). His play Mandrel did its premiere at the 17th International İstanbul Theatre Festival (2010). (http://tiyatro.iksv.org/en/program/27)

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