Set in the ancient city of Smyrna, this historical novel follows the intertwining fates of four families as their peaceful city is ripped apart by the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire.
Defne Suman was born in Istanbul and grew up on Buyukada.
She gained a Masters in sociology from the Bosphorus University,
then worked as a teacher in Thailand and Laos where she studied Far
Eastern philosophy and mystic disciplines. She later continued her
studies in Oregon, USA and now lives in Athens with her husband.
Her novel At the Breakfast Table is also published by Head of Zeus.
Find out more: defnesuman.com; @defnesuman.
Betsy Göksel is an American teacher and translator who has
lived in Turkey since the 1960's. Her translations include The Hate
Trap by Haluk Sahin as well as several books on art and
architecture for the Istanbul Municipality.
A symphony of literature
*Açik Radyo*
Defne Suman is a story-teller. She tells the story of how history
inevitably determines our personalities, destinies and lives. She
tells the story of how love, emotions and identities are influenced
by socio-political events of a lifetime
*Cumhuriyet Newspaper*
Defne Suman has crafted a wonderfully braided story of family
secrets set in the magical city of Smyrna. Told in luminous prose,
The Silence of Scheherazade is a romance full of rich and memorable
characters whose lives collided with a pivotal and tragic moment in
history. The novel is a delight
*Lou Ureneck, author of Smyrna, September 1922*
When Smyrna was reduced to ashes in September 1922, the world lost
one of its most beautifully cosmopolitan cities. Defne Suman and
Betsy Göksel have brought it back to life in all its glory in this
rich tale of love and loss, giving voice to the silenced, and music
to their histories
*Maureen Freely, Chair, PEN UK*
The Silence of Scheherazade is a wonderful, social and historical
novel, with delicate touches of love, and realistic moments of a
daily life that was lost forever
*Panos Tourlis, Books and Style Magazine (Greece)*
Suman's novel examines the conflict between a pluralistic notion of
selfhood and a monolithically constructed national identity. The
paradigms of exile and displacement, of speaking from minority
positions, are intertwined with these themes
*Sözcükler Literary Magazine*
Dense with rich descriptions and interwoven narrative threads... A
magnificent and illuminating historical novel concerned with every
day life in the diverse Ottoman Empire'
*Foreword*
'This unforgettable novel reveals a city, and a culture, now lost
to time'.
*LoveReading*
Part Victorian Gothic, part cosmopolitan modernist, and part
metatextual experiment... Suman deftly paints a picture of a city
which endures occupation after occupation... Suman's tale is at its
heart about those small people living their daily lives within the
city, loving each other and the land beneath them... Göksel handles
the translation of this complex tale just as skillfully as Suman
herself weaves it'
*Asymptote Journal*
At once breathtakingly sweeping and textured with alluringly fine
detail, this beautifully written story set in the Aegean city of
Smyrna in the lead up to WWI is a sumptuous tour de force
*LoveReading*
Suman's voice and descriptions are so unique and enveloping. I love
the characters and reading it is an utterly delightful
experience
*Buki Papillion, author of An Ordinary Wonder*
Turkish author Suman's lush saga intertwines the fates of four
families – Greek, Levantine, Turkish and Armenian – in a city now
lost
*Straits Times*
A truly beautiful book. Exquisite language is plied with great
skill to create gorgeous imagery. And the translator is an absolute
genius
*Historical Novel Society*
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