From Publishers Weekly
Written by a Turkish emigre to Canada, the 35 stories collected here--few longer than 1500 words--are hardly more than vignettes. Set mostly in Canada, they suffer from rudimentary characters and plots and amateurish writing (in "Montreal . . . Montreal . . ." prostitutes are described as "potent, radiant, and ready!"). Some make use of such tired devices as taking a seemingly innocuous situation to its extreme, as in "Engineer Wanted," in which a want ad for a position in Canada placed in a Turkish newspaper attracts such a flood of applicants that the interviewer is driven to exhaustion, then to fleeing his hotel and, eventually, the country. Stories on banal topics--the benefits of country life over urban, the evils of consumerism and computers--are further weighted down by heavy-handed treatment and obvious conclusions. While some pieces rise above this level--notably "Spring in Magog," an appealing tale of generations and cultures finding accommodation within one another, and "Mud," about the different ways youth and age perceive the world--overall, these stories fall flat.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Language Notes
Text: English (translation)
Original Language: Turkish
Original Language: Turkish
