Particularize Books Toward İnce Memed 1 (İnce Memed #1)

Original Title: İnce Memed
ISBN: 9750807146 (ISBN13: 9789750807145)
Edition Language: Turkish
Series: İnce Memed #1
Characters: İnce Memed, Abdi Ağa
Setting: Çukurova(Turkey)
Online İnce Memed 1 (İnce Memed #1) Books Free Download
İnce Memed 1 (İnce Memed #1) Paperback | Pages: 436 pages
Rating: 4.45 | 6382 Users | 339 Reviews

Specify Epithetical Books İnce Memed 1 (İnce Memed #1)

Title:İnce Memed 1 (İnce Memed #1)
Author:Yaşar Kemal
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 436 pages
Published:January 2004 by Yapı Kredi Yayınları (first published 1955)
Categories:Fiction. Asian Literature. Turkish Literature. Cultural. Turkish. Classics. Literature. Historical. Historical Fiction. Novels

Interpretation Conducive To Books İnce Memed 1 (İnce Memed #1)

Otuz iki yıllık bir zaman diliminde yazılan İnce Memed dörtlüsü düzene başkaldıran Memed'in ve insan ilişkileri, doğası ve renkleriyle Çukurova'nın öyküsüdür. Yaşar Kemal'in söyleyişiyle 'içinde başkaldırma kurduysa doğmuş' bir insanın, 'mecbur adam'ın romanı.

Abdi Ağa'nın zulmüyle köyünü terk etmek zorunda kalan Memed, Ağa'nın yeğeniyle evlendirilmek üzere olan Hatçe'yi kaçırır. Abdi Ağa'yı yaralayan, yeğenini de öldüren Memed eşkıya Deli Durdu'ya katılır, ancak kıyıcılığına katlanamadığı Deli Durdu'dan iki arkadaşıyla birlikte ayrılır. Memed, sıradan bir köy çocuğuyken, zulmedenler için eşkıyaya, köylüler içinse bir kurtarıcıya dönüşür.

"Bir yaşam biçimini bir halkın portresi olarak böylesine veren bu romandan daha iyisi yazılamazdı."
- The New York Times Book Review, (A.B.D.)

"Şaşırtıcı, orijinal bir kitap."
- Sunday Times, (İngiltere)

"Epik boyutlara ulaşan ve muhteşem bir sona ulaşmak için hız kazanan öyküye kendinizi kaptırıyorsunuz."
- Sunday Times, (İngiltere)

'Yaşar Kemal, şaşılacak ölçüde yaratıcı'
-The Booksell, (İngiltere)

'Yaşar Kemal, karakterlerini unutulmaz, seçkin ve gerçek hayattan daha da gerçekçi kılan detay zenginliği ile Rus Edebiyatının kalitesine ulaşıyor.'

Rating Epithetical Books İnce Memed 1 (İnce Memed #1)
Ratings: 4.45 From 6382 Users | 339 Reviews

Assessment Epithetical Books İnce Memed 1 (İnce Memed #1)
Although this book is about Anatolian culture and socio-economic environment in Turkish countryside during the 1930s, its message - which is mainly about the struggle between the oppressed and the oppressor - is, unfortunately, universal and timeless. Words will not do justice describing this book. And if I had those words; I would be Yaşar Kemal. So I think that every person should take her own journey through this masterpiece and discover the beauty of it by herself. This delightful piece of

A simple but yet intricately detailed story which was quite long but over all a pleasant and rewarding read. I was thankful for the satisfying ending.

İt was so emotional.

one of only two clunkers i've encountered on the normally superb New York Review Book backlist of reprints. this is a classic turkish novel about a boy who becomes a legendary robin hood-like hero in the turkish thistle-laden countryside. constantly beaten and unfairly treated by a cruel nemesis, he eventually gets his revenge. there are some nice descriptive nature passages, but i found the story too predictable and repetitive and slow. it was painful at times. could be the fault of the

There's a fantastic review of Absurdistan I once read that said:Just unbutton its shirt and let it bare its chest. Like a victorious wrestler, this novel is so immodestly vigorous, so burstingly sure of its barbaric excellence, that simply by breathing, sweating and standing upright it exalts itself.And yeah, I think that applies to Memed, My Hawk a whole lot more than it applies to Shteyngart's work. It's rare when you can write a classical legend in 1955. It's a John Ford Western except that

This book is written in the style of a folk tale: as a series of events and adventures. Within those parameters it works very well, but it is very much a 'show not tell' style and lacking in emotional depth. (You know what people do, but very little about what they feel.)The descriptions of lives and places are detailed and easy to imagine, even if you have never seen anything of rural Turkey.The book is worth reading for the way of life it depicts and the story, just don't expect introspection.

This book merits all the praise that it has received. It provides an outstanding view of life in the Anatolian highlands in the 1920s. The fall of the Ottman empire at the end of World War I has profoundly affected the social order in Turkey. Many of the old feudal families have lost their holdings. At the same time a class of nouveau richer has emerged and is making every effort to create a new feudalism by wresting the land holdings away from the peasants.Some of the dispossessed have formed