Ratings14
Average rating3.9
Orhan Pamuk's Snow falls into a weird, middle-ground territory for me. It's a well-crafted tale, rich with context and layers of meaning. But I didn't actually enjoy reading it all that much. From a third-person narrator point of view (we'll get to that later), Snow tells the story of Ka, a Turkish poet who has spent much of his adult life in political exile in Germany, newly returned to his home country for his mother's funeral. When he hears from an acquaintance that a beautiful former college classmate, Ipek, is freshly divorced, living in a border town called Kars, he finds himself a pretext to visit there to see her. The pretext is that there's been a recent wave of suicides among devout Muslim young women, who have been forbidden by government policy to wear their headscarves, and he's there to investigate.
The snow is already falling thickly when Ka arrives in Kars, and it ends up closing off the community over one long, turbulent weekend in which there are assassinations, coups, and police brutality. There are several storylines, all interwoven tightly: the community debate over headscarves, Ka's courtship of Ipek, Ka's suddenly rediscovered inspiration to write poetry, Ipek's relationship with her sister Kadife, both of their ties to a wanted terrorist, the poverty and desperation of the men in Kars, the hope and idealism of the boys at the Muslim high school. The theme of the tension between the West/secularism and the East/religion is pervasive, coloring all of the events of the novel.
Which turns out to be a story within a story, as we find out that the tale of Ka's time in Kars is being told by his friend “Orhan”, based on Ka's own written recollections. It's a little bothersome that although the conceit is that the story is being told by a third party, the narrator seems omniscient more often than not, but it's not a dealbreaker. What is more bothersome is that there is none of the characters is particularly well-developed, or to me, identifiable. Ipek is the embodiment of the virgin/whore dichitomy, either idealized or compared to a porn star. The terrorist, Blue, is constantly described as compelling without much in the story to make the reader understand why. Even Ka, though he is the center of the narrative, remains at a frustrating remove. Like Turkey itself, he's neither completely Eastern nor completely Western and vacillates between the two. He doesn't know his own mind, and it makes him hard to get a hold of as a character.
But the writing and structure is lovely. It's a little snowglobe of a story, and effectively creates the air of emotional claustrophobia that anyone who's been stranded (by snow or flooding or ice) for a few days can understand. I'm not sure that the third-party narrator is as effective a device as it could be, but I got a wry, frustrated smile out of plot machinations that mean that we never actually get to read one of Ka's inspired poems...it lets us just imagine how great the poems must have been without putting Pamuk under pressure to write something magnificent. This was a book club selection, and proved divisive for the most part: there were several people who loved it and just as many who completely hated it, with only very few (like me) falling in between. I wouldn't necessarily recommend it based on my own experience of it, but maybe you'll completely love it like some of my book club friends?
I've got this new “life project” thing that I've started up, whereby I am going to try to read at least one piece of literature from every nation on the planet. Orhan Pamuk's Snow was the first book that I read as part of that.
The point of saying this is to point out that this is not the type of book that I would normally read. While I do occasionally read novels that would be categorized as “capital L” literature, they are usually ones of an older vintage; classics, if you will. It was in that personal headspace that I sat down to read Snow.
Plot-wise, Snow centers around a poet named Ka, returning to Turkey from political exile in Germany, ostensibly in order to investigate a series of suicides among “head scarf girls” in the village of Kars.
Simply put, the book was a masterpiece of desolation and isolation. Throughout the novel Ka must come to grips with not only the head-scarf girls, but through them, his own feelings about his homeland, his religion, and his own emotional landscape. Pamuk's Turkey is a country caught in the crossroads - caught between Europe and Asia, between “secular humanism” and radical Islam, and between love and apathy. It's a fairly difficult read, but overall, it's well worth the experience of reading it.