The Architect’s Apprentice – Elif Shafak

599.00

‘Shafak’s most ambitious novel yer, and her best – generous and imaginative’ – Independent

‘Fasicnating. A vigorous evocation of the Ottoman Empire at the height of its power’ – Sunday Times

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Description

Sixteenth-century Istanbul –
a city of wonder and danger.

When a young boy, Jahan, arrives with a gift for the Sultan – a white elephant called Chota – the pair are sent tot the palace’s menagerie. There they learn to guard against the scheming of animal tamers, gypsies, deceitful courtiers and the mischievous Princess Mihrimah.

Welcomed into this foreign land, Jahan and Chota travel to the furthest corners of the Sultan’s kingdom – and to war. But one day when Jahan meets the royal architect, Sinan, he is given the chance to rise in court. To accept it to enter the marble halls walked by Princess Mihrimah, where the treacherous also plot – a true place of wonders and dangers…

About the Author

Elif Shafakwas born in Strasbourg, France, in 1971. She is an award-winning novelist and the most widely read woman writer in Turkey. Critics have named her as ‘one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary Turkish and world literature’. Her books have been translated into more than thirty languages and she was awarded the honorary distinction of Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters.

Shafak has published eleven books, eight of which are novels. She writes fiction in both Turkish and English. Shafak blends Western and Eastern traditions of storytelling, bringing out the myriad stories of women, minorities, immigrants, subcultures, youth and global souls. Her work draws on diverse cultures and literary traditions, as well as deep interest in history, philosophy, Sufism, oral culture, and cultural politics. Shafak’s writing breaks down categories, clichés, and cultural ghettoes. She also has a keen eye for black humor.

Shafak’s first novel, Pinhan (The Mystic) was awarded the ‘Rumi Prize’ in 1998, which is given to the best work in mystical literature in Turkey. Her second novel, Şehrin Aynaları (Mirrors of the City), brings together Jewish and Islamic mysticism against a historical setting in the 17th century Mediterranean. Shafak greatly increased her readership with her novel Mahrem (The Gaze), which earned her

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