Monday, 24 December 2018

Snow - or should that be "Slow"?

Any form of art is, as we all know, subjective. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and all that. So, if Snow, by Orhan Pamuk is one of your all time favourite books, then please look away now. Highly lauded with multiple 4 and 5 star reviews, I was hopeful that, despite my husband's warnings, this was a book I could get my teeth into. It's opening premise is great - we journey with Ka, a poet and political exile, as he travels on the bus to Kars, a town on the Turkish border. It is snowing hard and memories of his childhood in this place bubble up. He has been assigned to write a story about a worrying "epidemic" of young religious girls who are committing suicide, supposedly as a result of being forbidden from wearing their headscarves. However, when the town is cut off due to a blizzard, Ka finds himself caught in the middle of religious and political turmoil, including a theatrical coup. In the midst of this, Ka falls in love with the beautiful Ipek, who he tries to persuade to come back to Germany with him when the roads reopen again. Obsessed with the snow and his burgeoning love, Ka starts writing poems and hits a creative goldmine over the three days that the action takes place. But Ka cannot ignore the politics and is unwittingly caught between both sides. Needless to say, this doesn't end well. When I read what I've written so far, it sounds like a good story, and the bones of it are, but unfortunately, for me, the execution of telling this tale was dreary, depressing and dull. There is so much focus on the snow that it starts to get really irritating. Ka has no backbone. Other characters feel incredibly shallow. There is a lot of sitting around expounding on the beliefs of the different sides. Repetitious, confusing and frustrating. It left me not caring about any of the characters at all. It took me ages to read because I just couldn't get into it, which made me dislike it even more! I don't think I've ever given up on a book before, but this one was pretty close. If it hadn't been for trying to get through the PopSugar challenge, I probably would have put it to one side and moved on! So glad it's over!

POPSUGAR Challenge 2018 prompt 24: A book with a weather element in the title.

My STAR rating: TWO.

Length: 448 print pages.
Price I paid: free, borrowed from my husband (he did warn me!)
Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, audio CD, ebook.

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