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BOOKS

Honor Killings in the Twenty First Century book cover

Honor Killings in the Twenty-First Century
by Nicole Pope

Palgrave Macmillan 2011; paperback 2015

"In this powerfully written book, Nicole Pope takes a comparative look at so-called honor killings, searching out the patterns and triggers that cause families and relatives to kill women suspected of sexual misconduct or even just defiance or disobedience. Pope compares honor killings in Pakistan and Turkey with violence against women elsewhere in the world, opening the road to new ways of understanding what has often been seen as a Middle Eastern or Muslim problem. Her heart- wrenching interviews with victims' families and with women who survived illuminate the social and cultural forces that lead families to murder, but also give some glimpse of how this scourge might be eliminated."

Jenny White, author of Turkish Kaleidoscope, Muslim Nationalism and the New Turks and The Sultan's Seal

Turkey Unveiled: A History of Modern Turkey
by Nicole Pope and Hugh Pope


 

London: John Murray, 1997
Woodstock, N.Y.: Overlook Press, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2011

 

A New York Times "Notable Book" of 1999

"A careful attempt to combine criticism with understanding and affection for the country...one of the best accounts of Turkey's recent political history."
 

Orhan Pamuk, Times Literary Supplement, August 8, 1997

"An unrivalled history of modern Turkey"

The Economist, May 19, 2005

Turkey Unveiled book cover

"A deeply revealing guide to modern Turkish culture and politics that fills a wide gap in general knowledge...a brave and at times ironic book."
 

Robert D. Kaplan, The New York Times Book Review, January 17, 1999

"This book campaigns with great clarity and vigour against our ignorance and bewilderment ... Turkey Unveiled is a responsible and well-balanced book that neither takes sides nor shirks important issues. It conveys a clear picture of Turkey's development from Ottoman times to the present, it is rich in anecdote and observation, and manages to be affectionate and respectful, but highly critical, at the same time. It reads seamlessly, which is remarkable in a co-authored book."
 

Louis de Bernières, author of Captain Corelli's Mandolin, The Observer Review, June 15, 1997

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