To the Spring, by Night

Fiction & Literature, Literary
Cover of the book To the Spring, by Night by Seyhmus Dagtekin, MQUP
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Seyhmus Dagtekin ISBN: 9780773588240
Publisher: MQUP Publication: March 1, 2013
Imprint: MQUP Language: English
Author: Seyhmus Dagtekin
ISBN: 9780773588240
Publisher: MQUP
Publication: March 1, 2013
Imprint: MQUP
Language: English

Seyhmus Dagtekin's To the Spring, by Night, is the magical evocation of a childhood spent in a small Kurdish mountain village in Turkey, with no electricity and little literacy, but with a rich tradition of tale-telling and legend that infuses every living thing, every rock, stream, and spring with its own spirit and inner life. We follow the young protagonist as his horizons expand and share his real and imaginary fears as we come to know his isolated community, whose only contact with the outside world is through the male inhabitants' compulsory military service and the smuggling that takes them down from the heights and onto the plain below. Changing seasons, family intrigues, feast and famine, all run their course in the shadow of an imposing citadel overlooking the village, long ago abandoned by mysterious forerunners who may have left a hidden treasure behind. At a graceful pace, details emerge about the village's history until a shocking truth is revealed. Written in a restrained but lyrical language, To the Spring, by Night is a captivating portrait of a lost world. From the book The earth on which we trod each day, where our feet communed with time and memory, and our heads with the promises of the heavens. The earth that sheltered our village, so small when again I see it from afar perched in time amid the mountains. Our village that among those mountains was of such small consequence, disappearing behind the merest rock, lost from sight around the mildest curve. To think that living beings and things spent their entire lives on earth, before returning to the water, in this small place. But it seems very big, vast even, when I see myself small in its streets, small upon its rocks, when I see my life unfold again dwarfed by this immensity that has known so many millennia.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Seyhmus Dagtekin's To the Spring, by Night, is the magical evocation of a childhood spent in a small Kurdish mountain village in Turkey, with no electricity and little literacy, but with a rich tradition of tale-telling and legend that infuses every living thing, every rock, stream, and spring with its own spirit and inner life. We follow the young protagonist as his horizons expand and share his real and imaginary fears as we come to know his isolated community, whose only contact with the outside world is through the male inhabitants' compulsory military service and the smuggling that takes them down from the heights and onto the plain below. Changing seasons, family intrigues, feast and famine, all run their course in the shadow of an imposing citadel overlooking the village, long ago abandoned by mysterious forerunners who may have left a hidden treasure behind. At a graceful pace, details emerge about the village's history until a shocking truth is revealed. Written in a restrained but lyrical language, To the Spring, by Night is a captivating portrait of a lost world. From the book The earth on which we trod each day, where our feet communed with time and memory, and our heads with the promises of the heavens. The earth that sheltered our village, so small when again I see it from afar perched in time amid the mountains. Our village that among those mountains was of such small consequence, disappearing behind the merest rock, lost from sight around the mildest curve. To think that living beings and things spent their entire lives on earth, before returning to the water, in this small place. But it seems very big, vast even, when I see myself small in its streets, small upon its rocks, when I see my life unfold again dwarfed by this immensity that has known so many millennia.

More books from MQUP

Cover of the book The Congrégation de Notre-Dame, Superiors, and the Paradox of Power, 1693-1796 by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Spaces and Places for Art by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Seeing Ghosts by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book The Grand Regulator by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Death Talk, Second Edition by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Georges Bernanos by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Watch that Ends the Night by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Counterfeit Crime by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book The Hand of God by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Voices in Time by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Trojan-Horse Aid by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Canada's Residential Schools: The History, Part 2, 1939 to 2000 by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Satanic Purses by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Refugee Sandwich by Seyhmus Dagtekin
Cover of the book Rethinking Higher Education by Seyhmus Dagtekin
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy