Madonna in a Fur Coat

Madonna in a Fur Coat

Taschenbuch
4.171

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Beschreibung

"Madonna in a Fur Coat" is a renowned novel that was first published in 1943, since when it has moved and enthralled countless readers. It demonstrates that love in all its forms – unrequited, unattainable – is both beautiful and painful. It proves that love, despite often being painful and complicated, is the most fundamental and rewarding human emotion. The new translation offers a refined and updated rendition of Ali's original work, making it more accessible and enjoyable for modern readers. The prose is elegant, the characters nuanced, and the story is as relevant today as when it was written. This new translation allows readers to experience Sabahattin Ali's exquisite prose and vivid characterisation like never before. It is a novel that stimulates the imagination, stirs emotions, and reminds us of the transformative power of love. The book tells a moving love story set in the 1920s between Turkey and Germany. It has become a classic of Turkish literature.

Buchinformationen

Haupt-Genre
Biografien
Sub-Genre
Tagebücher & Briefe
Format
Taschenbuch
Seitenzahl
340
Preis
25.99 €

Autorenbeschreibung

Sabahattin Ali (1907-1948) was a Turkish writer, poet and journalist whose works were critical of Turkish society and politics of his time. Sabahattin Ali was a renowned Turkish writer, poet and journalist of the 20th century. He was born on 25 February 1907 in Gümülcine, a town in what is now Greece. Ali was one of the most influential representatives of modern Turkish literature and gained international recognition for his works.His most famous work, "Madonna in a Fur Coat" (1943), tells the love story between a Turkish student and a German artist. Sabahattin Ali is considered one of the most important writers of the 20th century. The book tells the moving story of an unhappy love and became a classic of Turkish literature.

Beiträge

9
Alle
5

Beautiful, yet incredibly sad

In my view, ‘Madonna in a Fur Coat’ by Sabahattin Ali is not merely a tragic love story. It is a literary portrait of loneliness and the longing to be loved by another person. The relationship between Raif Efendi and Maria Puder is characterised by indifference and emotional emptiness. In my view, this work is not merely a dramatic story, but the tragedy of a man who once truly loved and was never the same again.

4.5

Loved it!

Would read it again even though the ending was sad.

3.5

tender, yet devastating

Madonna in a Fur Coat is a quiet, beautifully melancholic novel that lingers long after its final page. Sabahattin Ali crafts a story that is both intimate and universal - an exploration of loneliness, identity, and the rare moments of connection that shape a life. The novel follows Raif Efendi, a man outwardly unremarkable and overlooked by those around him, yet inwardly rich with unspoken emotions and memories. When his younger colleague discovers Raif’s private diary, the narrative shifts to a luminous account of Raif’s youth in 1920s Berlin, where he encounters Maria Puder, the enigmatic “Madonna” of the title. Their relationship unfolds with a delicate realism that avoids sentimentality; Ali captures the hesitations, vulnerabilities, and mismatched expectations that define human intimacy. What makes the novel so moving is Ali’s ability to reveal emotional depth through restraint. The prose is gentle and unadorned, but every line carries weight. Raif’s internal world becomes a quiet protest against the way society dismisses those who appear meek or passive, reminding us how easily the richness of a person’s inner life can be overlooked. The book also excels at atmosphere: Berlin’s artistic cafés, chilly streets, and moments of stillness are rendered with cinematic clarity. Yet the story remains deeply Turkish in its sensibility, rooted in themes of duty, heartbreak, and the slow erosion of the self under social expectation. If the plot is simple, its emotional resonance is anything but. Madonna in a Fur Coat is not a dramatic novel but a tender, devastating one. It invites the reader to consider the fragility of love, the burden of unrealized potential, and the quiet tragedies that unfold unnoticed. A timeless, compassionate masterpiece, one that rewards patient reading and leaves a soft ache behind.

tender, yet devastating
4

Spoiler warning!!! While it’s easy to pin down the characters to modern terms such as “manic pixie dream girl” and “incel”, in my view it is a bit too shallow and does them injustice. Maria was an intriguing character to me because of her concerns regarding relationships. All those judgements and precautions resulted in an inability to allow herself to develop feelings for someone. Hence, her kind of ambivalent behavior throughout the book made a lot of sense. Raif, a lonely and boundless dreamer, became absolutely infatuated with Maria, or rather his “Madonna in a fur coat” he always wished for, right from the moment he saw the portrait. He constantly envisioned a specific, idealized vision of her in his mind. While I DO believe both of them shared a genuine, romantic bond, his misperception was clearly proved when he stopped receiving letters from her. For about ten years he seriously believed she just stopped writing to him and most likely found a new guy to be with, her ceasing to be “not like the other women”, as he saw it. Excuse me, but you have to be quite stupid to think a VERY physically sick Maria would recover perfectly after you parted ways and had no chance of dying. Especially when you yourself noted her letters became more and more an indication that she was struggling to write properly. Many quotes were nicely written and I marked a good chunk of the book, but at times all those melancholic musings on life became a bit too depressing, even for me. Some parts, especially on Raif’s side, made me raise my brow a few times. But I’m not here to discuss their morality, I believe in reading critically. It’s still a great story about alienation, loneliness and the complexities of love.

5

It’s so beautiful and sad. There are so many emotions put in there and so many thoughts which kept me shivering.

3

ᨳ᭬ ⭑ ⭑ ⭑ ࿐ྂ „Love is nothing like the simple compassion you describe, and neither is it a passion that comes and goes. It is something altogether different, something that defies analysis. And we are never to know where it comes from, or where it goes on the day it disappears. Whereas friendship is constant and built on understanding. We can see where it started and know why it falls apart. But love gives no reasons.” that was quite painful and i'm not really feeling well at the moment.

5

A masterpiece. My heart, at last, in pieces.

4

Read this in 72h. Beautiful and sad. Reminded me a lot of Giovannis room by James Baldwin.

3

3.5 ⭐️ wanted to get emotionally destroyed, didn’t end up like that so meh

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