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Öyle miymiş? book cover
Öyle miymiş?
2016
First Published
3.97
Average Rating
198
Number of Pages
Ne yaptık biz sahi burda bunca vakit, dört mevsim, oğul uşak, bez tarak? Ne yapacaksın bir düzen var, ilahî düzen, yaprak düşüyor, güzelim kuşlar huzurda el pençe bekliyor, insan kendisi tokken başkalarının da hep bir şekilde doyurulduğunu sanıyor, yemiştir bir şey diyor, doymuştur, içmiştir, içmez olur mu, yoksa ölür diyor, ama ertesi gün ölü mü diri mi bakmıyor. Aslan elleri önde eceli arkasında yatmış yarı aç ama heybetli, oğlan beş bin yıl evvelin hatalarını yapıyor, ama aklına derslerde de okusa, kitaplarda da kavuşamıyor, o da anlaşılan geçiyor, kız üç bin sene öncenin heveslerinde, senin kıza bak dirilse bir Asurlu gülecek, ey Mezopotamya, eski krallık, asma bahçeleri, kuleler, yenisi ve iyisi yapılamazken bunca yıkılmak niye?
Avg Rating
3.97
Number of Ratings
460
5 STARS
40%
4 STARS
29%
3 STARS
22%
2 STARS
6%
1 STARS
3%
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Author

Şule Gürbüz
Şule Gürbüz
Author · 6 books

She's not a hermit, though in other times she could have been. Her job is not in keeping with the times: she repairs the clocks in the Ottoman palaces. Şule Gürbüz is the only woman in the world to be an expert in mechanical clocks and author of two collections of stories which are small jewels of contemporary Turkish literature: Zamanin Farkinda (Aware of time, 2011) and Coskuyla Olmek (Die enthusiastically, 2012) Aged only eighteen she wrote her first novel, Kambur (The Hunchback, 1992), published at the first attempt by the well-known Iletişim, likewise publishers of her last two works. But, apart from an interval marked by a collection of poetry and a theatrical text, for almost twenty years Şule Gürbüz has remained outside the Turkish literary scene. She studied History of Art in Istanbul and Philosophy in England. On her return she became apprenticed to Recep Gürgen, the last master clock maker in the Imperial Palaces, to then become in her turn a master. Over the years the two of them were able to set working more than 300 clocks, both Turkish and foreign, belonging to the period between the XVI and XIX centuries. For the most part these clocks were recovered from a state of abandon and then put on show in museums which are today housed in the Topkapi and Dolmabahçe Palaces. This path has played a determining role in Gürbüz's writing which reflects on human existence and the sense of life using expressive and ironic language, taking up and giving voice to various themes in the Turkish-Muslim culture.

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