Seven Houses: A Novel

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Atria Books, 2002 - Fiction - 306 pages
From a grand villa in Smyrna to a silk plantation near Mount Olympus, from a little cottage in a dusty town to the indifferent apartments of a modern day high rise, SEVEN HOUSES charts the rocky, uncertain course of one family's ever-shifting fortunes across the twentieth century. As her characters' communal baths and odalisques give way to laptops and cell phones, Alev Lytle Croutier renders a world that is rich with the portents of history and the magic of true faith. In the shdow of World War I, the young widow Esma falls helplessly in love with the man who tutors her sons. Their union results in the birth of Aida, whose magical beauty brings pleasure and pain in equal measure. Esma's granddaughter, Amber, whose sheltered childhood on her uncle's plantation ends with frightening abruptness, finds solace in the American music on her transistor radio. The passions and secrets of the women of SEVEN HOUSES reach a stunning culmination when Amber returns to Smyrna with Nellie, her American-born daughter. In this emotional pilgrimage to the land of Nellie's ancestors, Croutier's enchanting, utterly captivating novel comes full circle.

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Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
10
Section 3
20
Copyright

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About the author (2002)

Born in Turkey, Alev Croutier has written and directed award-winning independent films and was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for her work on "Tell Me a Riddle". She is the author of the internationally acclaimed bestseller "Harem: The World Behind the Veil". She divides her time between San Francisco and Paris.

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