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Orhan Pamuk - My Name Is Red (Everymans Library Classics & Contemporary Classics)

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Orhan Pamuk My Name Is Red (Everymans Library Classics & Contemporary Classics)
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My Name Is Red (Everymans Library Classics & Contemporary Classics): summary, description and annotation

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One of the Nobel Prize winners best-loved novels, in a special edition featuring an introduction by the author and a chronology of Islamic and Western art history that provides additional context for this dazzling story of a murdered artist in sixteenth-century Istanbul.

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I AM CALLED BLACK

When I first laid eyes on her child, I knew at once what Id long and mistakenly recalled about Shekures face. Like Orhans face, hers was thin, though her chin was longer than what I remembered. So, then the mouth of my beloved was surely smaller and narrower than I imagined it to be. For a dozen years, as I ventured from city to city, Id widened Shekures mouth out of desire and had imagined her lips to be more pert, fleshy and irresistible, like a large, shiny cherry.

Had I taken Shekures portrait with me, rendered in the style of the Venetian masters, I wouldnt have felt such loss during my long travels when I could scarcely remember my beloved, whose face Id left somewhere behind me. For if a lovers face survives emblazoned on your heart, the world is still your home.

Meeting Shekures youngest son and speaking with him, seeing his face up close and kissing him, aroused in me a restlessness peculiar to the luckless, to murderers and to sinners. An inner voice urged me on, Be quick now, go and see her.

For a while, I considered silently quitting my Enishtes presence and opening each of the doors along the wide hallway-Id counted them out of the corner of my eye, five dark doors, one of which, naturally, opened onto the staircase-until I found Shekure. But, Id been separated from my beloved for twelve years because I recklessly revealed what lay in my heart. I decided to wait discreetly, listening to my Enishte while admiring the objects that Shekure had touched and the large pillow upon which shed reclined who knows how many times.

He recounted to me that the Sultan wanted to have the book completed in time for the thousandth-year anniversary of the Hegira. Our Sultan, Refuge of the World, wanted to demonstrate that in the thousandth year of the Muslim calendar He and His state could make use of the styles of the Franks as well as the Franks themselves. Because He was also having a Book of Festivities made, the Sultan granted that the master miniaturists, whom He knew were quite busy, be permitted to sequester themselves at home to work in peace instead of among the crowds at the workshop. He was, of course, also aware that they all regularly paid clandestine visits to my Enishte.

You shall visit Head Illuminator Master Osman, said my Enishte. Some say hes gone blind, others that hes lost his senses. I think hes blind and senile both.

Despite the fact that my Enishte didnt have the standing of a master illustrator and that this wasnt his field of artistic expertise at all, he did have control over an illustrated manuscript. This, in fact, was with the permission and encouragement of the Sultan, a situation that, of course, strained his relationship with the elderly Master Osman.

Thinking of my childhood, I allowed my attention to be absorbed by the furniture and objects within the house. From twelve years ago, I still remembered the blue kilim from Kula covering the floor, the copper ewer, the coffee set and tray, the copper pail and the delicate coffee cups that had come all the way from China by way of Portugal, as my late aunt had boasted numerous times. These effects, like the low X-shaped reading desk inlaid with mother-of-pearl, the stand for a turban nailed to the wall, the red velvet pillow whose smoothness I recalled as soon as I touched it, were from the house in Aksaray where Id passed my childhood with Shekure, and they still carried something of the bliss of my days of painting in that house.

Painting and happiness. I would like my dear readers who have given close attention to my story and my fate to bear these two things in mind, as they are the genesis of my world. At one time, I was contented here, among these books, calligraphy brushes and paintings. Then, I fell in love and was banished from this Paradise. In the years I endured my amorous exile, I often thought how I was in fact deeply indebted to Shekure and my love for her, because they had enabled me to adapt optimistically to life and the world. Since I had, in my childlike navet, no doubt that my love would be reciprocated, I grew exceedingly assured and came to regard the world as a good place. You see, it was with this same earnestness that I involved myself with books and came to love them, to love the reading my Enishte required of me back then, my religious school lessons and my illustrating and painting. But as much as I owed the sunny, festive and more fertile first half of my education to the love I felt for Shekure, I owed the dark knowledge that poisoned the latter time to being rejected; my desire on icy nights to sputter out and vanish like the dying flames in the iron stoves of a caravansary, repeatedly dreaming after a night of love that I was plunging into a desolate abyss along with whichever woman lay beside me, and the notion that I was simply worthless-all of it was furnished by Shekure.

Were you aware, my Enishte said much later, that after death our souls will be able to meet with the spirits of men and women in this world who are peacefully asleep in their beds?

No, I was not.

We take a long journey after death, so Im not afraid of dying. What I fear is dying before I finish Our Sultans book.

Part of me felt I was stronger, more reasonable and more reliable than my Enishte, and part of me was dwelling on the cost of the caftan that Id purchased on my way here to meet with this man whod denied me his daughters hand and on the silver bridle and hand-worked saddle of the horse which, soon after going downstairs, Id take out of the stable and ride away.

I told him Id apprise him of everything I learned during my visits to the various miniaturists. I kissed his hand and brought it to my forehead. I walked down the stairs, entered the courtyard, and sensing the snowy cold upon me, accepted that I was neither a child nor an old man: I joyously felt the world upon my skin. As I shut the stable door, a breeze began to stir. I led my white horse by the bridle over the stone walkway to the earthen part of the courtyard, and we both shuddered: I felt as if his strong, large-veined legs, his impatience and his stubbornness were my own. As soon as we entered the street, I was about to swiftly mount my steed and disappear down the narrow way like a fabled horseman, never to return again, when an enormous woman, a Jewess dressed all in pink and carrying a bundle, appeared out of nowhere and accosted me. She was as large and wide as an armoire. Yet she was boisterous, lively and even coquettish.

My brave man, my young hero, I see youre truly as handsome as they say you are, she said. Might you be married? Or might you be a bachelor? Would you deign to buy a silk handkerchief for your secret lover from Esther, Istanbul s premier peddler of fine cloth?

Nay.

A red sash of Atlas silk?

Nay.

Dont go on piping nay at me like that! How could a brave heart like you not have a fiance or a secret lover? Who knows how many teary-eyed maidens are burning with desire for you?

Her body lengthened like the slender form of an acrobat and she leaned toward me with an elegant gesture. At the same time, with the skill of a magician who plucks objects out of thin air, she caused a letter to appear in her hand. I stealthily grabbed it, and as if Id been training for this moment for years, I hastily and artfully placed it into my sash. It was a thick letter and felt like fire against the icy skin of my side, between my belly and back.

Ride at an amble, said Esther the clothes peddler. Turn right at the corner, following the curve of the wall without breaking stride, but when you get to the pomegranate tree turn and look at the house youve just left, at the window to your right.

She went on her way and vanished in an instant.

I mounted the horse, but like a novice doing so for the first time. My heart was racing, my mind was overcome by excitement, my hands had forgotten how to control the reins, but when my legs tightly gripped the horses body, sound reason and skill took control of my horse and me, and as Esther had instructed, my wise horse ambled steadily and, how lovely, we turned right onto the sidestreet!

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