The Garden of Departed Cats

Front Cover
New Directions Publishing, 2003 - Fiction - 256 pages
In an ancient Mediterranean city, a tradition is maintained: every ten years an archaic game of human chess is staged, the players (visitors versus locals) bearing weapons. This archaic game, the central event of The Garden of the Departed Cats, may prove as fatal as the deadly attraction our narrator feels for the local man who is the Vizier, or Captain, of the home team. Their "romance" (which, though inconclusive, magnetizes our protagonist to accept the Vizier's challenge to play) provides the skeletal structure of this experimental novel. Each of their brief interactions works as a single chapter. And interleaved between their chapters are a dozen fable-like stories. The folk tale might concern a 13th-century herbal that identifies a kind of tulip, a "red salamander," which dooms anyone who eats it to never tell a lie ever again. Or the tale might be an ancient story of a terrible stoat-like creature that feeds for years on the body of whomever it sinks its claws into, like guilt. These strange fables work independently of the main narrative but, in curious and unpredictable ways, (and reminiscent of Primo Levi's The Periodic Table), they echo and double its chief themes: love, its recalcitrance, its cat-like finickiness, and its refusal to be rushed.

With many strata to mine, The Garden of the Departed Cats is a work of peculiar beauty and strangeness, the whole layered and shiny like a piece of mica.

From inside the book

Contents

The Garden of Departed Cats
1
The Man Who Misses His Ride Night After Night
25
A Medieval Monk
43
In Praise of the Fearless Porcupine
57
In Praise of the Crab
75
The Man Walking in the Tunnel
99
Kill Me Master
115
Our Sea
137
RedSalamander
179
Another Peak
215
Where the Tale Also Rips Suddenly
237
Copyright

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References to this book

Balkanistica, Volume 18

Snippet view - 2005

About the author (2003)

Bilge Karasu (1930-1995) was born in Istanbul and his several novels include two translated into English: Night (Louisiana State University Press, winner of the Pegasus Prize for Literature) and Death in Troy (City Lights).

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