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Notes from a Turkish Whorehouse
Notes from a Turkish Whorehouse
Oct 10, 2024 8:27 PM

Author:Philip Ó Ceallaigh

Notes from a Turkish Whorehouse

A performance artist opens his chest and displays his beating heart on stage. A young man walks through the hills of south-west Romania, where the locals have peculiar ideas about gold. On the morning of a medical examination, a woman tries to coax her husband off the roof. A smuggler pays off an old debt to his sister and resigns himself to a life of honest toil in the mine-shafts of his home town. A mysterious rodent named Brigitte enters the lives of two old men. And, in the astonishing long story 'In the Neighbourhood', the inhabitants of a crumbling tower-block go about their business, unforgettably. The stories of Philip Ó Ceallaigh create a world that is utterly original and yet immediately recognizable - a world of ordinary people grappling with work and idleness, ambition and frustration, wildness and sobriety, love and lust and decay. Scabrously honest, screamingly funny and beautifully crafted, Notes from a Turkish Whorehouse is a brilliant debut from a writer who cannot be ignored by anyone who cares about the art of fiction.

Reviews

Exemplary stories...The reader of Stegner's writing is immediately reminded of an essential America...a distinct place, a unique people, a common history, and a shared heritage remembered as only Stegner can.

—— Los Angeles Times

An excellent mix of stories - some dark and mysterious, others heart-warming and thought-provoking.

—— Good Housekeeping (Reader Recommended)

Harris is an intriguing writer, so this is worth a punt, if only to savour the seasonal horror of the story about a house where it's Christmas all year round.

—— The Lady

Strongly plotted and written in registers that are variously comical, sad and surreal...Best of all is 'Cookie', where delicious gluttony - Harris's forte - gathers a sharp note of menace.

—— Independent

Harris inhabits a world where fantasy and reality collide in a most inventive way to produce a series of delightful, bittersweet yarns.

—— Bella

She is a sculptor of the human condition: nothing more and nothing less than an artist

—— Evening Standard

It is almost impossible to describe their unforced exactness, their unrushed economy... Munro has a genius for evoking the particular and peculiar atmosphere of relationships, their unspoken pressures and expectations

—— Alan Hollinghurst , Guardian

Her genius cannot be denied... The contemporary writer I admire above all others

—— Independent

The greatest living short-story writer

—— A.S. Byatt , Sunday Times

Munro is routinely called one of the finest living writers.You can turn to any of the stories in Runaway and see why

—— People

No one could dispute Munro's greatness

—— Daily Mail

Goosebumpingly unforgettable

—— New York Observer

Runaway may well be the synthesizing work of one of literature's keenest investigators into the human soul

—— USA Today

The great Alice Munro proves again why short story writers bow down to her

—— Vanity Fair

[Munro] really is the short story writer to beat... Munro has always been fascinated by those moments that tilt our world on its axis, as though the world really does turn on a kiss, but her brilliance lies in the psychological way that she convinces us of that fact

—— Lesley McDowell , Independent on Sunday

In crystalline prose, she illuminates her characters' hopes and longings

—— Rebecca Rose , Financial Times

[Munro] has been compared to Chekhov and I'm only being slightly tongue in cheek when I say that the honour is entirely his. Dear Life is comprised of 13 rich and startling stories, a must read

—— Niamh Boyce , Irish Independent

I haven’t even finished all of Dear Life, but Alice Munro’s stories have lived with me for such a long time and with such quiet passion that I’m barely capable of explaining why

—— Shahidha Bari , Times Higher Education

[Munro’s] talent is formidable but she has never been self-seeking: her short stories have a subtle, covert brilliance

—— Kate Kellaway , Observer

These stories won’t give you easy moral comfort, but will stretch you. They’re moral in that they name things as they are

—— Father Ronald Rolheiser , Catholic Herald

Dear Life is a dazzling portrait of ordinary existence which illustrates how seemingly insignificant meetings and moments can have a monumental impact

—— Upcoming

This collection is beautiful; full of pure, simple truths that linger long in the mind

—— Philip Womack , New Humanist
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