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A Fez of the Heart: Travels around Turkey in…
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A Fez of the Heart: Travels around Turkey in Search of a Hat (origineel 1995; editie 1996)

door Jeremy Seal

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2524107,026 (3.49)12
Inspired by a dusty fez in his parents’ attic, Jeremy Seal set off in 1993 to trace the astonishing history of this cone-shaped hat. Soon the quintessentially Turkish headgear became the key to understanding a country beset by contradictions. “A modern travel classic” (Herald Express).… (meer)
Lid:janglen
Titel:A Fez of the Heart: Travels around Turkey in Search of a Hat
Auteurs:Jeremy Seal
Info:Mariner Books (1996), Edition: 1, Paperback, 352 pages
Verzamelingen:2014 reading, Jouw bibliotheek
Waardering:***1/2
Trefwoorden:travel, Turkey

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A Fez of the Heart: Travels around Turkey in Search of a Hat door Jeremy Seal (1995)

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Toon 4 van 4
I rather like this book. Jeremy Seal weaves history, culture and anecdote around the theme of the fez. The hat is just a vehicle for the rest, an interesting way of linking the various elements of the book, even if it does get a little irritating after a while. ( )
  janglen | Mar 30, 2014 |
There are two essentials to any great travel book. Firstly a passion for the place and the people, and secondly the ability to share the experience with the reader. Seal's love (and knowledge) of Turkey is clear, but the storytelling is slow, overly-dense and indigestible. If ever a story needed leavening, or a better editor, this is it. I sampled several chapters, and put it back on the shelf for a much rainier day. The detail redeems it - sort of, but not recommended for any but the most passionate consumers of Turkish travel stories. ( )
  nandadevi | Jun 7, 2013 |
Rating: 3.25* of five

The Book Report: Author Jeremy Seal, British of course, found an elderly fex in his parents' attic and, in true Brit fashion, became obsessed with Turkey. I mean, what else is possible when one finds a fez in the attic?

I think an American would be more interested in how the fez got there, which parent had the Turkish man as a lover, what the hell the thing was...not leap straight into Turkophilia. But us colonials, we're just not as finely tuned as the Motherlanders to the nuances of life.

In other words; we're sane.

So off Jezza goes, in 1993 mind you, as a grown man, to indulge his peculiar obsession. He arrives in a Turkey that resembles the fez-wearing Turkey of his childhood interest very little. The story he tells us as we tag along with him on his voyage of discovery is that of Turkey's utterly fascinating reinvention of itself after the Great War swept away empire and sultan all in a day. We meet Turks old and young, and to a one they are as crotchety and odd as one could wish them to be. In the end, the hat that brought Jeremy Seal to Turkey is his personal madeleine, the key to memory and knowledge.

My Review: I like stuff about Turkey because I think it's one of the most interesting places on the surface of the earth. I've liked every Turk I've met, too, and dated one Turk for a year or so. I went into reading this book, on a friend's recommendation, with all sorts of goodwill and eagerness.

I came out with all the goodwill and none of the eagerness.

I like the book, don't get me wrong. I quite enjoyed the capsule Turkish history, I was amused by the cultural divide the author frequently fell into, and I was kept reading by the author's evident love for his subject.

I don't like Jeremy Seal. Not even a little bit. I think he comes across as a snotty little prig, a self-absorbed twit, and an obsessive-compulsive hat fetishist. If I met him in the flesh, I would not be inclined to linger, but rather to escape.

And that, sad to say, is my take-away from this very nice book. It overrode the pleasures of Turkophilia, which I too have, and left me with Sealophobia. I think that's a damn shame. ( )
1 stem richardderus | Jun 13, 2012 |
The author takes Turkey's famed hat as an organizing principle for an in-depth look at modern Turkey and it's divides. Although a decade old now, it remains up-to-date in its examination of the tensions between Muslims and secularists in Turkey. The Fez began as a reformist sultan's attempt to Westernize his country - but then was abolished by Ataturk, who wanted to be even more Western. Earnest discussion of the symbolism of headgear is balanced here by some laugh-out-loud travel experiences with Turks young and old. ( )
1 stem teaperson | Apr 28, 2007 |
Toon 4 van 4
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'I think it is that you are trying to be something which you never can be, something which nobody with any sense would wish to be - a European.'

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By the shores of the Turkish Mediterranean they once built a city beyond reproach.
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"You don't want to go to Erzurum at this time of year," he assured me. "Fill a refrigerator with mud and stick your head in it for six months. That's Erzurum in the winter."
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Inspired by a dusty fez in his parents’ attic, Jeremy Seal set off in 1993 to trace the astonishing history of this cone-shaped hat. Soon the quintessentially Turkish headgear became the key to understanding a country beset by contradictions. “A modern travel classic” (Herald Express).

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