EBOOK

More

A Novel

Hakan Günday
(0)
Pages
404
Year
2016
Language
English

About

The award-winning More, by one of Turkey's leading underground writers, is the world's first novel about the refugee crisis. "The illegals climbed into the truck, and, after a journey of two hundred miles, they boarded ships and were lost in the night." Gaza lives on the shores of the Aegean Sea. At the age of nine he becomes a human trafficker, like his father. Together with his father and local boat owners Gaza helps smuggle desperate "illegals," by giving them shelter, food, and water before they attempt the crossing to Greece. One night everything changes and Gaza is suddenly faced with the challenge of how he himself is going to survive. This is a heartbreaking work that examines the lives of refugees struggling to flee their homeland and the human traffickers who help them reach Europe-for a price. In this timely and important book, one of the first novels to document the refugee crisis in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East, we see firsthand how the realities of war, violence, and migration affect the daily lives of the people who live there. This is a powerful exploration of the unfolding crisis by one of Turkey's most exciting and critically acclaimed young writers who writes unflinchingly about social issues.

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Reviews

"The importance of this novel . . . lies in its horrific portrayals of refugees fleeing desperate situations. . . . [A] complex, Dostoyevsky-like inquiry into man's capacity for evil."
Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times
"Imagine a nine-year-old child assisting his father with the family business-the ruthless smuggling of humans. Imagine this child's apprenticeship in profit and survival and unspeakable cruelties that numb him to what it means to be human. Imagine this child's graduation from bystander to killer. Hakan Günday will take you there in his unflinching and momentous novel More."
Ursula Hegi, New York Times bestselling author of Stones from the River
"This urgent novel by one of Turkey's most acclaimed contemporary writers demands to be read not just because of its subject matter, the current migrant crisis and human trafficking, but because of its timeless exploration of violence, fidelity to family, and the extremes to which any of us will go to craft a new life from the wreckage of an old one. This translation of Hakan Günday's work is a gi
Elliot Ackerman, author of Green on Blue

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