
Kurt Kanunu
It tells about people who are trapped in a corner, living with the fear of "eating what is left to the wolf is the law" at their necks at all times, and who are coming to terms with themselves, their past, and the time they are in. Kemal Tahir in Wolf Law. The novel, which can also be read as the drama of those involved and implicated in the "Izmir Assassination" incident, which is considered one of the most depressive periods of the Republic, reveals the power struggle among the Unionists and the liquidation process with brutal simplicity and self-criticism.
In the Captive City Trilogy. Kemal Tahir, who started to lose the hope he had in Road Crossing, masterfully describes in The Wolf Law the days when it was no longer important to whom and what the struggle was against - by hiding his disappointment between the lines.
(From the Promotional Bulletin)
Dough Type: strong>2. Dough
Publisher | : | Ithaca publications |
The heart | : | Turkish |