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Last Train to Istanbul
Last Train to Istanbul
Author: Ayse Kulin
When Selva, the daughter of one of the few remaining Ottoman Pashas, falls in love with Rafael, a young Jewish man, their families are against their marriage and disown them. Together they go to live in France, but happiness eludes them there too. With the advent of the Second World War they get caught up in Hitler's web of terror. While the Naz...  more »
ISBN-13: 9789752893276
ISBN-10: 9752893279
Rating:
  • Currently 3/5 Stars.
 2

3 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: Everest
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 5
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njmom3 avatar reviewed Last Train to Istanbul on + 1396 more book reviews
Review first published on my blog: http://memoriesfrombooks.blogspot.com/2013/09/last-train-to-istanbul.html

The Last Train to Istanbul is a story of World War II - in particular the Turkish community in Europe at the time of the war. Originally published in Turkish in 2002, the book has now been translated into English.

At the heart of the story is one family, descendants of the Ottoman emperors of Turkey. The parents give their daughters an education and liberty yet hold fast to traditional values. One daughter, Sabiha, follows that traditional path and marries an eligible young man and becomes a diplomat's wife. The other daughter Selva chooses a different path and marries out of the faith. Selva is Muslim, and Rafael is Jewish. Selva and Rafael marry against both families' wishes and flee to France to build a new life.

Then comes the Nazi invasion of France and the hunting down of Jewish residents. Selva and Rafael search for safety and learn that family comes together regardless of the disapproval of their choices. Through connections and the work of a group of Turkish diplomats in Europe, the two along with many others escape towards freedom.

The book is historical fiction - the history providing the story and the fiction providing the emotional basis. The book goes more on the side of history than the emotions of the individual characters and this family. Their characters and relationship do not fully develop. The characters remain a piece of the history being told, rather than the history becoming a backdrop for the story of this family. As such, the book is interesting to read, but an emotional detachment remains. That detachment makes it a less engaging book.

*** Reviewed based on a publisher's galley received through NetGalley ***