Why a Booktrail?
2000s: Summer in Istanbul is hot and deadly….
2000s: Summer in Istanbul is hot and deadly….
An old woman is found dead in a flat and beside her lies the perfectly preserved and mummified body of a young man. The postmortem throws up some very interesting findings.
Meanwhile in the Jewish quarter of the city, two children are missing. Their father seems rather more concerned with his work as an artist than his children.
Elsewhere a Russian gangster claims a dead body is his daughter
Could the connection to all cases lie in a macabre forgotten art?
Istanbul was stewing in the humid, forty-degree heat of a midsummer afternoon, but the man’s skin felt as if it had just been removed from a refrigerator.
If the various shades and temperatures of a chilling crime in hot and humid Istanbul is your thing, then Barbara Nadel is your ideal guide.
First of all, this is not your usual corpse – mummified and with strange coloured eyes, this is one mystery that is going to lead Cetin Ikmen down some dark and dangerous paths. This man seems to be from Argentina..and so the plot thickens.
From the Jewish Quarter, we are then taken to Balat where two children have gone missing from their home
This is a side to Istanbul we had never seen before. Something strange is going on and these are not straight forward crimes. Not by a long shot. with the main protagonist, Cetin Ikmen with a mother who was known as ‘the famous witch of Uskudar’, that should probably give you some insight into the parts of Istanbul we’re now headed.
An interesting part of the novel lies in Melih Akdeniz and his ‘art’ made with human hair or other strange things and has created many enemies with his controversial themes.
And on top of these strange happenings, the melting pot of cultures continues to be stirred with each character seemingly practicing their own faith. A backdrop of religious antagonism and war therefore which brings wider world issues to the fore.
Twitter: @BarbaraNadel
Web: barbara-nadel.com
Back to Results