Events
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Start: 7:00 pm
The online box office is now closed. Tickets will be available at the door.
Tickets to this event are $30 and include a signed first edition of The Museum of Innocence.
This is event is presented in association with Inprint.
“It was the happiest moment of my life, though I didn’t know it.” So
begins the new novel, his first since winning the Nobel Prize, from the
universally acclaimed author of Snow and My Name Is Red. It
is 1975, a perfect spring in Istanbul. Kemal, scion of one of the
city’s wealthiest families, is about to become engaged to Sibel,
daughter of another prominent family, when he encounters Füsun, a
beautiful shopgirl and a distant relation. Once the long-lost cousins
violate the code of virginity, a rift begins to open between Kemal and
the world of the Westernized Istanbul bourgeosie—a world, as he
lovingly describes it, with opulent parties and clubs, society gossip,
restaurant rituals, picnics, and mansions on the Bosphorus, infused
with the melancholy of decay—until finally he breaks off his engagement
to Sibel.
But his resolve comes too late. For eight years Kemal will
find excuses to visit another Istanbul, that of the impoverished
backstreets where Füsun, her heart now hardened, lives with her
parents, and where Kemal discovers the consolations of middle-class
life at a dinner table in front of the television. His obsessive love
will also take him to the demimonde of Istanbul film circles (where he
promises to make Füsun a star), a scene of seedy bars, run-down cheap
hotels, and small men with big dreams doomed to bitter failure. In his
feckless pursuit, Kemal becomes a compulsive collector of objects that
chronicle his lovelorn progress and his afflicted heart’s reactions:
anger and impatience, remorse and humiliation, deluded hopes of
recovery, and daydreams that transform Istanbul into a cityscape of
signs and specters of his beloved, from whom now he can extract only
meaningful glances and stolen kisses in cars, movie houses, and shadowy
corners of parks. A last change to realize his dream will come to an
awful end before Kemal discovers that all he finally can possess,
certainly and eternally, is the museum he has created of his
collection, this map of a society’s manners and mores, and of one man’s
broken heart.
A stirring exploration of the nature of romantic attachment and of the mysterious allure of collecting, The Museum of Innocence also
plumbs the depths of an Istanbul half Western and half traditional—its
emergent modernity, its vast cultural history. This is Orhan Pamuk’s
greatest achievement.
Orhan Pamuk won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2006. His novel My Name Is Red won the 2003 IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. His work has been translated into more than fifty languages. He lives in Istanbul.
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