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Rating: Summary: TURKISH DELIGHT Review: As a Turkish woman, I have admired Mrs Croutier's writing for a very long time. Many years ago, she wrote the wonderful book, Harem, which introduced me for the first time to the history of my own ancestors, the women of Turkey's past. I am so happy she has started writing fiction. This new book, Seven Houses, is a real jewel. I also recommend Palace of Tears, her first novel that came out only recently. I highly recommend this book to all women interested in their own past.
Rating: Summary: Seven wonders Review: I closed "Seven houses" with regret, I wanted to follow Amber and her daughter back to America! I found the book poetical, poignant, (the last meeting with the grand and great-grand mother is superb) and sometimes very funny (de decaf plantation in particular). I learned how it feels to be a Rum (although I am not quite sure what it is, it seems to be the equivalent of being Jewish during the European middle-ages) and related beautifully to Amber, her hybridity, her wonder and sometimes impatience at the world.
Rating: Summary: MY FIRST REVIEW Review: I have never written a review on the Internet. But I was really surprised when I saw only one review (a very good one!) posted for this wonderful book. I found it to be very much in the same spirit as Isabelle Allende's House of the Spirits or Katherine Neville's book, The Eight, or Alice Walker's the Color Purple - and then I saw that all these writers had written comments about the book, themselves! So I would really recommend Seven Houses for anyone who likes any of the above. It's really unique.
Rating: Summary: Unique and fabulous Review: I just love this book! It is a brilliant evocation of place (various locations in Turkey), and exploration of familial relationships from women's point of view. There are so many new fiction books trying to attract our attention all the time. This one stands out from the crowd and is one of the most rewarding I have read in many years. It is on my list of all-time favourites. Try it. Take it on holiday, snuggle under the quilt for a couple of days and be transported!
Rating: Summary: You want to be mesmerized, try this journey! Review: I was assigned to read this book. Well, that is what I do for a living... I am usually very skeptical about the content when I get assignments... It was hard to turn to the first page and actually start reading... I finished Seven Houses in about three days. I needed to take breaks in order to digest what I just read and not because I was bored! I was trying to do justice to the piece... I was recapturing its essence in the air as I breathed and acquired more energy to feel it! Alev Lytle Croutier's words are stringed together to lead you through a silk road that opens to the unknown. You smell flowers, watch colors and taste cusines as you journey into the era that is lost but just found by you... You are the walls, the bricks and the plaster of these houses... You tell the story to the neighbors, the ones that are most curious, you are the seven houses, embodying spirits locked up in the freedom of your four walls. If you dream of the impossible, if you fly to the highest, if you wish life was something different than waking up every morning and going to work, the fiction about the stories of four generations who lived in seven different houses will fascinate you. Drink the words, chew on the reflections, cozy up with the silk and please remember to breathe while turning the pages of this unique book. Welcome to the Ottoman Empire, the Harem, the quarters of the servants and the passion... welcome to another dimension!
Rating: Summary: POWERFUL! ASTOUNDING! Review: SEVEN HOUSES is a powerful work about four generations of Turkish women, as told from the viewpoint of the houses they have lived in over the decades. At first, I wasn't sure what was happening, as the first house began to tell its story about the people who had lived there. Then I realized I was looking back through time, to an era in a culture I had never seen before. I am not surprised that this book has received such acclaim for being new, fresh, and different.
Rating: Summary: "Seven Houses" Dazzles the Mind, Heart, Senses Review: Turkish expatriot Alev Coutier's multigenerational autobiographical novel revels in the ways and descending fortunes of a large silkmaking clan, one that enjoys its varied eccentricities. One member rules a silk empire, another loses the family's all to a con artist in a coffee scam, one is crowned "Miss Turkey," while another runs off to sing/dance in a carnival. Several commune with spirits, and the spunky heroine finally escapes to America. This arresting book tracks the family through seven houses in different parts of Turkey, weaving in much of its 20th-century history--from a conservative Muslim state that modernizes under Ataturk...to one that has partially reverted back at the century's end. Witty anecdotes, burning emotions, sensitive observations, and raw conflicts are sculpted in singing prose, bursting with life!
Rating: Summary: When Stories Are Harder to Bear Review: When Stories Are Harder to Bear I like a book that will speak with me of spider webs, nightingales, an Adonis tree, even the blinding of a fox named Scheherazade. What really lives inside an egg of Amber? Where in the world is Smyrna? How does kismet devour the apple of a person's other plans for their life? For the last 10 days, afraid to have it end too soon, lost in the so specific genius of ALEV LYTLE CROUTIER and her "SEVEN HOUSES." I have slowed myself to a reader's crawl, all through these opening days of cold and Parisian rain. I've been basking in the vaporous warm hammam of its pages, and I did not want it to end. I wanted a world of a thousand nights and petals and the third eye of houses who may speak as witnesses to history, and tell me secrets I could never know, or invent. Maybe I wanted to escape this week's news reports of a world I no longer dare to understand. Of couse I did. And I wished to hear, with a little gentleness, of that region of the globe that I, or many, misapprehend. What may it have been like, once upon a time, in lands that border Iran and Iraq? What kind of women were growing up, there? I wanted to learn it through the pen of a wise and mysterious writer. So I found her. Croutier is a story teller extraordinaire, and more. And she is a most useful kind of a poet, and more. When language is exalted by story and story is exalted by language, "quel plaisir." Get the point? I loved it. Read "Seven Houses," and dream with its veils and its unveiling. Read it and discover a family you might not wish for your own, but one you want to pursue through its emergence - from a time when story counted for everything, to a time when the stories are harder and harder to bear. Margo Berdeshevsky/ Paris/ October, 2002
Rating: Summary: READERS BEWARE Review: You should leave at least one full weekend to read the new book by Alev Croutier, Seven Houses. In fact, you should spend the weekend very close to a Turkish restaurant. I found my mouth watering for more food, more time at the spa getting a steam bath, more time turning myself back into the beautiful, sexy [female] I USED to be! The women in this book are into being women at the same time as being interesting human beings. By the way--as a Latin American woman--is that a snapshot of Dolores del Rio on the front book cover? My Idol. Congratulations to the author for reintroducing women to women.
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