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Some of the books mentioned in this article, from our launch issue in 1992, | ||
'So, you want to know more about Turkey but are unsure which books to turn to? Recent years have seen an avalanche of guide books on Turkey, ranging from Tom Brosnahan's Turkey: A Travel Survival Kit (Lonely Planet Publication), aimed at the rucksack and jeans market, to the Blue Guide Many of the guide books are heavily slanted towards the west and southern coasts of Turkey Strolling through Istanbul by Hilary Sumner-Boyd and John Freely and Imperial Istanbul: Iznik -Bursa-Edirne by JaneTaylor (Tauris Parke) focus almost exclusively on monuments. Strolling through Istanbul has become the Blue Guide. It should be read alongsideThe Life of the Party by Maureen Freely, the daughter of one of the authors, (Penguin Books). I am precluded from commenting on the Insight Guide to Turkey since I had a hand in it, but Istanbul the Insight City Guide, edited by Thomas Goltz, has its finger firmly on the pulse of the contemporary city. It will guide you through bars, discos, Armenian churches, Turkish baths,second-hand bookshops, theatre, butchers shops and ethnic remnants. There are relatively few good regional guides. If you want somethin super- specialised on Byzantine Cappadocia and its rock monasteries, try Lyn Rodley's Cave Monasteries of Byzantine Cappadocia (Cambridge University Press) or Oxford University Press's The Caves of God by Spero Kostof. Redhouse, an Istanbul-based American publisher, has a two volume book on short excursions around Istanbul of up to 150 miles, Guide books for central Turkey are less easy to come by. Ekrem Akurgal's Ancient Ruins of Turkey (published in Turkey by Haset Kitabevi) is a comprehensive archaeological guide If you are travelling along the western or southern coasts and want to know where the ancient cities were and what their people were like, the four volumes by George Bean,(published by John Murray) beginning with Aegean Turkey and ending with Turkey's Southern Shore should be your constant companions. Anyone venturing along the same coast line should take Turkish Waters Pilot by Rod Heikell, published by Imray Norie and Wilson. Want a Turkish dictionary? If you want to know which words to use in daily speech, bear in mind that Oz Tiirkce (the purified language using words derived from Turkish roots) and loan words from English and French are gaining ground, while Persian and Arabic expressions are in retreat. The extraordinary diversity of Turkish poetry is available to English readers in the Penguin book of Turkish Verse, edited by Nermin Menemencioglu. Alas Penguin has let it go out of print, but copies can still occasionally be found in second-hand shops. Anyone seriously interested in Turkey will eventually turn to the nineteenth-century travellers. It is a sad comment on our age that the travel books written a hundred years ago are, almost without exception, better than those of today. Since most are out of print, there seems little point in recommending them, though On Horseback Through Asia Minor The travels of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, wife of the English ambassador in Istanbul in 1717 and 1718 are available in a handsomely illustrated volume of her letters, edited by Christopher Pick and published by Century Books For Ottoman history there is no better way to begin than byreading Halil Inalclk's The Ottoman Empire published by Weidenfeld & Nicholson. A companion volume, Byzantium: The Empire of New Rome by Cyril Mango is the best introduction to Byzantine civilization. Romilly Jenkin's Byzantium: the Imperial Centuries (Vintage Books) is a splendid narrative history of the empire from the seventh century to the eleventh which has not been surpassed. Finally, for those who just want pictures, there are lots of good photographic books of Turkey. The undisputed coffee-table champion is Turkey: A Timeless Bridge by Peter Holmes (Stork Press).The photographs are so good that you can plan your itinerary from them - or sell the idea of a holiday in Turkey to a doubtful spouse. David Barchard 1992
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