Buy snow online in Tabriz
Buy snow online in TabrizBuy snow online in Tabriz
__________________________
📍 Verified store!
📍 Guarantees! Quality! Reviews!
__________________________
▼▼ ▼▼ ▼▼ ▼▼ ▼▼ ▼▼ ▼▼
▲▲ ▲▲ ▲▲ ▲▲ ▲▲ ▲▲ ▲▲
Buy snow online in Tabriz
We can deliver the Snow Paperback — July 19, speedily without the hassle of shipping, customs or duties. We have a dedicated team who specialize in quality control and efficient delivery. Since , desertcart has been delivering a wide range of products to customers and fulfilling their desires. You will find several positive reviews by desertcart customers on portals like Trustpilot, etc. The website uses an HTTPS system to safeguard all customers and protect financial details and transactions done online. The company uses the latest upgraded technologies and software systems to ensure a fair and safe shopping experience for all customers. Your details are highly secure and guarded by the company using encryption and other latest softwares and technologies. Books Literature And Fiction. Price includes Import Duties and Taxes. Free shipping available. From Tunisia. Snow Paperback — July 19, Add to cart FREE. Spotted a better price elsewhere? Self ship it at cheapest rate! Easy Returns with desertcart PRO. Live chat Email. About the item Full description not available undefined. Our secularists, who are always relying on the army and who are destroying Turkey's democracy, hated this book because here you have a deliberate attempt by a person who was never religious in his life to understand why someone ends up being what we or the Western world calls an Islamic fundamentalist terrorist. In Orhan Pamuk's self-avowed first and last political novel, the disaffected and somewhat anesthesitized inhabitants of Kars find their imperfect voice in his newest novel. Through mad-cap theatrical coup and broad, windy statements to an imagined and unhearing 'Western Press,' the reader is ingeniously treated and sometimes led by the nose through the complexity of an Islamic society desiring access to its past and admittance to the modern world. Therein lies the rub. Understanding is everything, although it can't immediately change anything. The readers of 'Snow' will find many intricately drawn zany characters, who represent a spectrum of political fundamentalist Islam; adherents, admirers and detractors. All are deliciously served up on an exotic Turkish platter and are no less appealing for the remote locale of Kars. As a reader, I am consistently amazed by Mr. Pamuk's stellar ability to give authentic, credible voice to a wide array of eccentric characters, each effortlessly recognizable for all their foible. There is also a remarkable, transcendent levity to Pamuk's depiction of what are deeply tragic events; a rather mystical take on the 'ship of fools' theory of life. When a young fundamentalist student in the book expresses his desire to become the 'first Islamic science fiction writer' it is a wistful, encouraging and poignant statement. The people of Kars do not by any means lack for voice. What they lack is a stable political vehicle that allows the coherent telling of their tale. The varying degree of political involvement portrayed in the aloof dreaminess of love-sick Ka, ex-leftist, poet and main character; the complex hyperbole of Blue, fundamentalist outlaw, and Kadife, a forthright 'westernized' girl from Istanbul converted to head-scarf activism represent the voices we don't usually hear behind the sad ubiquity of exploding bombs. There are plenty of Pamukian literary devices in this novel that address the author's recurring themes and symbols. These have to do with questions of identity and metaphysics. Some note has been made in reviews here USA pondering the possible meaning s of Ka's name. I am told the author was influenced by Kafka. If readers of 'Snow,' desire a clue to the meaning or significance of the town's name, 'Kars' see the ending pages of 'The New Life also highly recommended. Pamuk continues to employ his own abundantly. The symbol of snow in Turkish, 'kar' is both tender metaphor and unifying symbol. Snowfall covers everything in the novel and everyone indiscriminately, possessing the miraculous nature of each snowflake's distinct design. Distinct design also aptly describes the Kars citizenry. As I was finishing this valuable, well-written book, an Islamic faction in Iraq was holding two French journalists hostage, demanding that France lift its ban on the wearing of head-scarves by Muslim girls in French public schools. The underlying controversy of the book? A ban on head scarves in Turkish public schools by the state officials of Kars, resulting in a wave of suicides by young girls. Or was that the actual reason? Decide for yourself, by reading 'Snow'. One of the great fortuitous compliments I imagine an author receives to his probable chagrin is life attempting an awkward imitation of his art. Understanding is everything, even when it changes nothing. Perhaps it is all we, at times, can do. This review exposes the plot; skip to the last two paragraphs for my personal view. A poet named Ka, raised middle-class in Istanbul, returns from a long political exile in Frankfurt to a small, mountainous town in Turkey called Kars to investigate why young woman are committing suicide, ostensibly because they are denied schooling for insisting on wearing a political head scarf in public and thus offending the secular military authorities. Ka wastes no time in Kars and falls in love with the beautiful Ipek, a divorcee living with her younger sister and aging former Communist father. Ipek is trying to recover from a former love affair with an accused Islamic terrorist named Blue. Ipek's headstrong younger sister Kadife has taken Ipek's place as Blue's lover Ipek's involvement with Blue only becomes known late in the book. Passionate but poor students from the local school idolize Blue and seek to understand visiting poet Ka, who they suspect of atheism. Ka witnesses the public assassination of a high-level official who enforced the headscarf rule at the university. Blue is accused of the killing but innocent. After a night of political violence at the National Theater, Blue is captured. Ka, now involved romantically with Ipek, becomes a key element in a plan to get Blue released. Ka is tasked to persuade Ipek's sister Kadife to take part in a televised play where she defiantly takes off her head scarf on stage--thus pleasing the authorities and in return getting Blue released. The evening of the play, after Blue is released according to the plan, he sends a message for Ka to visit him. Ipek tells Ka not to go, and Ka's reasons for deciding to go are difficult to understand given his hope of future happiness in Frankfurt with Ipek. Blue tells Ka when he arrives to stop Kadife from exposing her head on the national stage. Ka returns to his hotel room and discusses this with Ipek. Ipek, while she and Ka are planning to leave for Frankfurt and packing suitcases in the hotel room where they made love, now tells Ka to obey Blue--that Kadife should not expose her glorious hair in public--but Ka now is somewhat unsure of Ipek's loyalty and locks her in the room with her strange consent. Local authorities picked up Ka after his visit with Blue and informed him that Ipek and Blue were former lovers, and that Ipek's phone-tapped conversations indicated they were still a couple. Ipek escapes the locked hotel room but soon finds out that Ka turned in Blue to the authorities, who kill Blue, and that Kadife not only exposed her head on stage but unintentionally murdered one of the performers with a stage pistol that should have had blank cartridges. She will be sent to jail four years for this. Ka holds onto his fading dream of a life in Frankfurt with Ipek, but knows that he should have listened to Ipek's pleas and never left the hotel room to see Blue. Ka is escorted by authorities to a train leaving Kars for Frankfurt, but he realizes when Ipek does not come to the train that she must have concluded that Ka turned in Blue's location to the authorities. Ka and Ipek never see each other again. Ka, living alone in Frankfurt for many years after his stay at Kars, is killed by gunshot on a street by an unknown assailant never identified. Ka's friend, author Orhan Pamuk playing himself in the novel , investigates his death by going to Kars. He also tries to find the 19 poems that Ka wrote while inspired there. He is unsuccessful in this, thinking that his assailant must have stolen Ka's green book containing the poems, but while in Kars Pamuk nearly falls in love with the beautiful Ipek himself. The author, playing himself, believes the young women in Kars commit suicide out of pride. At the end of the novel, Pamuk lists the actual page locations in the text where Ka wrote his 19 poems. Ka was apparently inspired whenever Ka feared that his planned happiness would be lost, either by fate or by his own crude incompetent decisions and actions. There is snow imagery throughout the book possibly symbolizing Providence. It covers the decay of Kars and makes it appear clean and white. A six-pointed snowflake diagram is used by Pamuk to show how Ka organized his poems. The three axes of the snowflake are taken from Bacon's ideals of reason, imagination, and memory. NOTE: I withheld a fifth star because this elegant, abstract organization of the poems did not seem to fit well with their instantaneous inspiration to Ka during times of stress or anxiety. The book ends as Pamuk leaves Kars on a train while snow falls on the shabby city: 'The thin and elegantly quivering ribbons of smoke rising from the broken chimneys at last seemed a smudge through my tears. To me this book was a powerful narrative showing that love and happiness--between Ka and Ipek or between Kadife and Blue--are not possible without freedom, especially when stifling traditions and age-old conflicts infect the culture. The story is Romeo and Juliet or Abelard and Heloise for the middle-aged--a tragedy. The canary in the coal mine here is the artist, shot and killed either in the street Ka or on stage Sunhay for non-conformist thinking and writing, illustrating how the destruction of free ideas and ideals, including the loss of personal love and the chance for happiness, follows somewhat naturally from excessive control, whether that control comes from military authorities or an aging, intolerant culture. On the other hand, ironically, an artist living in fear and under threat seems to experience his best inspirations--that's when Ka writes his poems most effortlessly. The artist's life in real life may not always be tragic, but it remains melancholy and sad: his life and culture as rising smoke from a broken chimney--a smudge through one's tears amidst the snow. Quality of pages to cover, everything was as expected. The book was delivered in an impeccable condition. A novel set in Turkey after Ataturk. This book gets off to a promising start. It finally picks up with a successful romantic interlude, leading the reader to hope for a happy ending, but then goes on and on again, finally ending with the main character dying back in Germany and his place being taken by -- the author. Perhaps the best parts are the short poems that pop up here and there. I bought this as a sort of 'experiment' to branch out of my typical genres, and was incredibly pleased with it. It shipped very quickly, and was in excellent shape when I got it, despite being a used book. There were times that it lost my attention a bit, but others where it grabbed me and pulled me in until I couldn't stop reading. It's lead to a lot of really late nights, just trying to absorb as much as I could. Overall, a great book. I liked My Name is Red but found it a bit I am not a 'big' fan of what I had read earlier by Orhan Pamuk. I liked My Name is Red but found it a bit long and intense, and I could not read beyond a few pages of Museum of Innocence. But I did find in these books an author who was at complete ease in dealing with complex plots, ideas, emotions and conflicts and who did this with elan. So when I read about the subject matter of Snow, my first thought was that he was probably the best person to pen such a novel. I wasn't disappointed at all as the book deals with a huge variety of very pertinent questions for our world. Though it is based in Turkey, I think a vast majority of book readers across the world will find the themes close to home. Love, loneliness, success and immigrant's uprooting are all issues that he deals with a touch that is both humane and hard-nosed. The backdrop of political tussle between popular fundamentalism and against it is a sensitive one to tackle and the book does that in a very balanced way - with adequate background and reasoning voices on all hues of opinion and without oversimplification. It's long and intense but it does flow along nicely - it's a very well written work from a master and definitely worth a read. Pamuk at his best! A gripping tale of love in a Kurdish Turkish snowstorm reveals the twisting undercurrents of secular and religious society driving Turkey's search for a place in today's world. Disclaimer: The price shown above includes all applicable taxes and fees. The information provided above is for reference purposes only. Products may go out of stock and delivery estimates may change at any time. For additional information, please contact the manufacturer or desertcart customer service. While desertcart makes reasonable efforts to only show products available in your country, some items may be cancelled if they are prohibited for import in United Arab Emirates. For more details, please visit our Support Page. Is Snow Paperback — July 19, available and ready for delivery in Tunisia? Is it safe to buy Snow Paperback — July 19, on desertcart?
Handmade persian and oriental rugs
Buy snow online in Tabriz
Contact us for a low international shipping quote. It is not Hand Tufted or Machine Made rug. Condition : Vintage. Country of Origin: Turkey. Foundation : Cotton. Pile : Wool. General Field Color : Ivory. Border Color : No Border. Other Colors : Blue, Gray, Beige. Weight : 7. Return Policy. Remake your home with this amazing Hand-Knotted carpet. This distinct piece has been knotted for several weeks in the centuries-old traditional weaving craftsmanship techniques by expert artisans. Before written history, mankind was using wool to make life better and comfortable. Although scientists have tried many times to make a synthetic product with all of the qualities of wool, they have never succeeded. Nothing compares with the comfort, resilience, versatility, and health benefits of pure wool. Hypoallergenic - Wool is resistant to bacteria, mold, and mildew, which trigger reactions in some people. Temperature controlled - Wool is warm in cool weather, cool when it's warm. Naturally fire retardant - Wool extinguishes itself when touched to a flame. It won't continue to burn. Because of this fact, firemen wear wool clothing. Dust mite repellant - Dust mites need moisture to survive. Wool evaporates moisture quickly and is inhospitable to dust mites. Note : Dear getarug Customer, Please be advised that the package size does not reflect the rugs actual size as many times it is folded and then rolled in order to meet FedEx and UPS shipping regulations. We have made every effort to display the colors of our rugs as accurate as possible. But the colors may vary depending on your monitor type and the illumination levels of your space. Unprocessed wool arrives at the hand spinning facility in large bales, the wool is then cleaned by hand, to remove sticks and to break up the clumps. The cleaned wool is spun into the yarns by using a traditional spinning wheel. Whether it's wool, silk or cotton it all starts with the material selection. The big piles of wool are hung onto a large rack and then submerged into the dye. The dye is heated to a near-boiling temperature for a predetermined amount of time. Depending on the weather, the dyed yarn is then set to be dried in the sunlight for one to three days. Pot dyeing and vegetable dyes natural are sometimes being used in this process. Before the yarn is dyed, it is first washed. This process happens by submerging the wool into a detergent bath, and then wrung out several times. The yarn is washed again in clean water to remove all remnants of the detergent. A design is rendered and printed out to on an enormous graph paper, or map called The Naksha. This complete map contains all the minor details of the design that will be applied in making the rug, knot by knot. To start weaving, the loom must be prepared with columns of warps and wefts sometimes called woofs. Warps are the threads that run vertically and are intertwined with the threads called wefts which run horizontally. Once the first row or weft is finished and firmly pushed down a second row intertwines to avoid knots from moving. The intense labor is repeated until a durable and precious rug is completed. An experienced weaver can complete up to nine thousand knots per day. Hand-knotted rugs are one of a kind masterpieces created by skillful artisans who possess in their hands the traditions carried down from generation to generation. The entire rug is put throught the process called binding and trimming, then it is washed and dried several times for vibrancy and sheen. The rug is laid flat on the ground, then fresh water is poured over it. The rug washers then use a wood plank, sharpened on one edge, to force the water through the rug pile. This removes impurities picked up during the creation process. No backing is needed for a hand-knotted rug. The final steps include quality inspection of size, pile height and shearing. It is important to notice that each weaver or group of weavers adds personality to the new rug, no two rugs are ever the same and all of our handmade rugs are one-of-a-kind. Share this Rug :. Condition : Used. The Overdyed and Patchwork handmade rug, represents one of the hottest trends in the industry today. Each Overdyed rug is stripped of its original colors, then dyed again in vibrant hues, to create unique and one-of-a-kind pieces. The Patchwork rug is handcrafted out of salvaged, vintage carpets, with a variety of colors combining to form a wholly unique and textured design. Note :Dear getarug Customer, Please be advised that the package size does not reflect the rugs actual size as many times it is folded and then rolled in order to meet FedEx and UPS shipping regulations. The yarn is washed again in clean water to remove all remnants of detegent. Our pads are dual sided with a natural rubber that provides increased grip on your floors and avoids the failures of synthetics that may stain your wood over time. Rug pads are custom cut to the exact size of your rug, as such they are Non-refundable. Close Handmade persian and oriental rugs. Skip X. Thank You! We've added you to the mailing lists you selected. We take your privacy seriously to see for yourself, please read our Email Privacy Policy. Close Email this Product. Your Email. Your Name. Your Friends Name. Send this rug to following email. An appointment is recommended. Account Cart No Products in the Cart. Close Sign up for a discount. Make an offer for rugs Make your best offer, or call us. Sent to administrator Successfully. Items can be returned for a full refund within 30 days of receipt. Shipping charges for returned items are the responsibility of the customer. Returned items should be packed and shipped to the below address: getarug 40 Universal Place Carlstadt NJ Guaranteed to be a genuine hand knotted oriental rug. Experience the magic of a real hand-knotted rug. Most Recently Viewed. Shipping Worldwide.
Buy snow online in Tabriz
Tabriz Airport (1361m)
Buy snow online in Tabriz
Buy snow online in Tabriz
Tabriz 50Raj
Buy snow online in Tabriz
Buy snow online in Tabriz
Buy snow online in Tabriz
Buy snow online in Tabriz