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Iron Earth, Copper Sky (1963)

by Yashar Kemal

Other authors: See the other authors section.

Series: Wind From The Plain (2)

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901304,566 (4.23)1
The second volume in the acclaimed The Wind from the Plain trilogy Turkey's unsurpassed storyteller, Yashar Kemal The second volume in the acclaimed The Wind from the Plain trilogy Turkey's greatest novelist, Yashar Kemal was an unsurpassed storyteller who brought to life a world of staggering violence and hallucinatory beauty. Kemal's books delve deeply into the entrenched social and historical conflicts that scar the Middle East. The Wind from the Plains trilogy is widely seen as his masterpiece, alongside the legendary Memed My Hawk.After a particularly bad season, a group of poor cotton-pickers are unable to pay their creditor, shopkeeper Adil Effendi. Overwhelmed with shame and guilt, they wait in terror for Adil to come and demand retribution. But when he inexplicably fails to appear, Adil begins to represent an irrational and tyrannical force, growing in their minds until they become sick with apprehension and obsessed with the terrible disaster that is sure to come upon them.In their despair they turn to Tashbash, a brave, decent and loyal man, investing him with virtue, grace and miraculous power. But the cotton-pickers have no idea of the effect of their idolatry on Tashbash, with his innocent doubts and mental torment, until his fate finally befalls him and the novel draws to its apposite close. Written with deep compassion and lyrical beauty, this is a novel alive with the acute observation of human nature.… (more)
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I hadn't realised that this was the second book of a trilogy. However, I think it stands well enough alone. It's set in a poor Turkish village, at the start of a bitter winter. This is a world where an old woman can make a vow never to speak to another living soul, and stick solemnly to it, or where a beggar can speak incoherent words which are taken for prophecy.

The villagers have been unable to harvest enough cotton in the summer to pay off their debts to the town shopkeeper, and are terrified by his unforgiving reputation (the story goes that the last time a village couldn't pay their debts, he arrived with his men and took everything of value, down to the drawers the women were wearing). They make all sort of preparations for his visit... but he does not come. This puts the village into such a pitch of terrified hysteria that all sorts of coincidences start to look like portents, and all of a sudden, one of the villagers - a man called Tashbash - is being hailed as a man with holy powers who will deliver them from their troubles. Tashbash himself doesn't want to have anything to do with this. But he happens to be a bitter enemy of the town's headman, who takes the whole thing as a plot against him - will Tashbash be able to extricate himself?

This was an interesting story, with wonderful descriptions of village life and the surrounding mountains. It's a deceptively light read, which I enjoyed, although the deliberate folkloric simplicity of the style is not really my thing. ( )
1 vote wandering_star | Feb 18, 2010 |
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» Add other authors (5 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Yashar Kemalprimary authorall editionscalculated
Andac, MunevverTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Munkhof, Wim van denTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Harvill (44)
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The second volume in the acclaimed The Wind from the Plain trilogy Turkey's unsurpassed storyteller, Yashar Kemal The second volume in the acclaimed The Wind from the Plain trilogy Turkey's greatest novelist, Yashar Kemal was an unsurpassed storyteller who brought to life a world of staggering violence and hallucinatory beauty. Kemal's books delve deeply into the entrenched social and historical conflicts that scar the Middle East. The Wind from the Plains trilogy is widely seen as his masterpiece, alongside the legendary Memed My Hawk.After a particularly bad season, a group of poor cotton-pickers are unable to pay their creditor, shopkeeper Adil Effendi. Overwhelmed with shame and guilt, they wait in terror for Adil to come and demand retribution. But when he inexplicably fails to appear, Adil begins to represent an irrational and tyrannical force, growing in their minds until they become sick with apprehension and obsessed with the terrible disaster that is sure to come upon them.In their despair they turn to Tashbash, a brave, decent and loyal man, investing him with virtue, grace and miraculous power. But the cotton-pickers have no idea of the effect of their idolatry on Tashbash, with his innocent doubts and mental torment, until his fate finally befalls him and the novel draws to its apposite close. Written with deep compassion and lyrical beauty, this is a novel alive with the acute observation of human nature.

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