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Farhi Moris

    This author explores the intricate relationships between cultures, identity, and heritage within his prose. Through compelling narratives, he delves into themes of migration, memory, and the search for belonging. His style is characterized by a keen insight into the human psyche, often touching upon issues of justice and forgetting. His works have been translated into numerous languages, attesting to their universal resonance.

    Jonge Turk
    My End is My Beginning
    Songs from Two Continents: Poems
    A Designated Man
    Children of the Rainbow
    Journey Through the Wilderness
    • 2020

      A brave and exquisitely written dystopian fantasy from celebrated novelist Moris Farhi MBE. This good old-fashionedtale of good triumphing over evil is a must read for fans of Vladimir Nabokov (Ada or Ardor); Salman Rushdie (The Moor's Last Sigh); Gabriel Garcia Marquez (100 Years of Solitude)

      My End is My Beginning
    • 2011

      The poems in Songs from Two Continents follow a tradition extended from the folk poetry of the common peoples of Turkey, infusing Moris Farhi's Turkish roots with his European upbringing.

      Songs from Two Continents: Poems
    • 2009

      A Designated Man

      • 348 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      Osip returns to his remote island home, only to find the blood feud that wiped out so many families, including his own, is still tearing apart the island. On his first day back he narrowly escapes with his life. While tending the wounds, of the feudist Bostan, he discovers Bostan's true identity.

      A Designated Man
    • 2002

      Daniel Brac goes to South America to restore a major painting. But he is also on a mission: he must redeem his life-long cowardice and hunt the war criminal who murdered his father. This is an epic voyage across the primal landscape of politics and religion, culture and morality, spirituality and sexuality.

      Journey Through the Wilderness
    • 2001

      Combining fact, fiction and mythology, this novel examines the Holocaust's effect on Central and East European Gypsies. Branko, born in Auschwitz, embarks on a quest to find the Gypsy Bible, which will unite his persecuted people and lead them to Romanestan, their mysterious homeland. schovat popis

      Children of the Rainbow