From Publishers Weekly
Determined to follow the trails of other famous writer-explorers--including Herman Melville, Eliot Warburton and Joseph Brodsky--Lawlor ( In Bolivia ) is at once clever and sensitive as he guides the reader through modern Turkey. Embarking alone from Istanbul, where mosques and McDonald's dwell in uneasy proximity, he depicts Turkey, long the embattled crossroads of Moslem and Christian civilizations, as a nation of many cultures forced together in a struggle to reconcile a stubborn past with an impatient future. Lawlor makes this dichotomy clear through his quest for the title character, Osman. A rogue con man of popular ancient legend whose actual existence may itself be a ruse, Osman is, by his very nature, elusive to westerners because he, in the words of the author's Turkish friend, " . . . belongs to a past the country would like to forget." Lawlor possesses the skill to describe the exotic without need to draw western parallels to establish context with his readers. Additionally, in a type of book where the author is nominally the star, he appears comfortable in allowing his subject to dominate the work.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Lawlor travels "to explore the elsewhere--the anywhere but here." He visits Istanbul and learns of the mythical rogue Osman, a survivor of the Old Turkey constantly battling the modern Turkey of Ataturk and his successors. With anecdotes and constant quotes from earlier travelers, Lawlor ( In Bolivia , LJ 11/15/89) provides an entertaining tale as he goes by ferry, bus, and car across Anatolia, meeting Turks and tourists in circumstances only veteran travelers can fully appreciate. The book is a vivid and witty depiction of one man's impressions, from bathhouse to bazaar, from bustling cities to windswept plains, of a country trying for decades, but failing, to be modern.
- William R. Smith, Johns Hopkins Univ. Lib., Baltimore
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
- William R. Smith, Johns Hopkins Univ. Lib., Baltimore
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

