Nevin moves through the narrow streets and waterfront cafés of Istanbul with a freedom that unsettles those around her. She speaks to fishermen, lingers in taverns, listens without judgment, and quietly defies the invisible rules that govern respectable life. But in a world sustained by conformity, a woman who refuses to be contained becomes not merely misunderstood, but dangerous. What begins as curiosity turns to suspicion, and suspicion hardens into something colder, something far more merciless.
In Lost and Wanted, Sait Faik Abasıyanık crafts a haunting and deeply humane portrait of alienation, dignity, and quiet resistance. His only novel expands the emotional depth and luminous sensitivity that made him one of the most singular voices of twentieth century literature. With extraordinary precision, he reveals the fragile boundary between individuality and exile, and the subtle violence through which a society erases what it cannot possess or understand.
Through Nevin's story, Abasıyanık exposes not only the cruelty of social judgment, but also the irreducible solitude at the heart of being human. What remains is not absence, but a presence transformed—unclaimed, unforgettable.
Nevin moves through the narrow streets and waterfront cafés of Istanbul with a freedom that unsettles those around her. She speaks to fishermen, lingers in taverns, listens without judgment, and quietly defies the invisible rules that govern respectable life. But in a world sustained by conformity, a woman who refuses to be contained becomes not merely misunderstood, but dangerous. What begins as curiosity turns to suspicion, and suspicion hardens into something colder, something far more merciless.
In Lost and Wanted, Sait Faik Abasıyanık crafts a haunting and deeply humane portrait of alienation, dignity, and quiet resistance. His only novel expands the emotional depth and luminous sensitivity that made him one of the most singular voices of twentieth century literature. With extraordinary precision, he reveals the fragile boundary between individuality and exile, and the subtle violence through which a society erases what it cannot possess or understand.
Through Nevin's story, Abasıyanık exposes not only the cruelty of social judgment, but also the irreducible solitude at the heart of being human. What remains is not absence, but a presence transformed—unclaimed, unforgettable.
| Taksit Sayısı | Taksit tutarı | Genel Toplam |
|---|---|---|
| Tek Çekim | 100,50 | 100,50 |
| 2 | 52,26 | 104,52 |
| 3 | 36,18 | 108,54 |
| Taksit Sayısı | Taksit tutarı | Genel Toplam |
|---|---|---|
| Tek Çekim | 100,50 | 100,50 |
| 2 | 52,26 | 104,52 |
| 3 | 36,18 | 108,54 |