The New Life
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Narrated by:
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John Lee
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Written by:
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Orhan Pamuk
About this listen
From the Nobel Prize winner and the acclaimed author of My Name is Red comes an engaging intellectual thriller and high romance set in Turkey about a young student whose life and identity is uprooted through the single act of reading a book.
The protagonist of Orhan Pamuk's fiendishly engaging novel is launched into a world of hypnotic texts and (literally) Byzantine conspiracies that whirl across the steppes and forlorn frontier towns of Turkey. And with The New Life, Pamuk himself vaults from the forefront of his country's writers into the arena of world literature. Through the single act of reading a book, a young student is uprooted from his old life and identity. Within days of reading a book, a young student’s old life and identity is uprooted, and he’s fallen in love with the luminous and elusive Janan; witnessed the attempted assassination of a rival suitor; and forsaken his family to travel aimlessly through a nocturnal landscape of traveler's cafes and apocalyptic bus wrecks. As imagined by Pamuk, the result is a wondrous marriage of the intellectual thriller and high romance. Translated from the Turkish by Guneli Gun.
What the critics say
"[A] weird, hypnotic new novel.... It veers from intellectual conundrums in the Borges vein to rapturous lyricism reminiscent of Gabriel Garcia Marquez." —The Wall Street Journal
"One of the essential and enduring writers that the East and West can gratefully claim as their own." —The New York Times Book Review
What listeners say about The New Life
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Joan Heaton
- 2024-06-25
Extended allegory of modern Turkey, with relatable details.
The reader took an overly dramatic approach to the text which was most distracting and which made the narrative hard to follow. I found myself becoming increasingly annoyed as the story progressed because the reading made me miss some of the important points in the plot. I am a great Pamuk fan and have patience with his delightfully obsessive style but this version required a level of interpretation that I found tiresome.
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