In her TED Talks on the politics of fiction and the revolutionary power of diverse thought, author-activist Elif Shafak speaks on the urgent need for plurality in response to rising authoritarianism:
“From populist demagogues, we will learn the indispensability of democracy. From isolationists, we will learn the need for global solidarity. And from tribalists, we will learn the beauty of cosmopolitanism.”
Born in 1971 and raised in Turkey, Shafak has experienced first-hand how fascism feeds itself on binary thought. It is through multiplicity, she argues, and the nuances stoked by storytelling, that we can expand our imaginations, transcend borders and bolster international empathy.
With 19 books to her name, Shafak stand as Turkey’s most widely-read woman writer. In bestsellers like The Bastard of Istanbul, The Forty Rules of Love, and Three Daughters of Eve, she provides an amalgamation of Eastern and Western perspectives, reflecting the complexities of identity and human experience. Beyond her fiction, her passionate advocacy for social justice, women’s rights, and freedom of expression reverberates through prolific essay-writing and public engagements.
In a reading list for One Grand, Shafak shared 10 books that most shaped her views on the personal, the poetic and the political. From James Baldwin to Virginia Woolf, find her favorites below, and complement with the bookshelves of other celebrated authors and activists.
Elif Shafak’s Reading List
Orlando by Virginia Woolf (also rec’d by Barbara Kingsolver, Gabriel García Márquez, Jeanette Winterson & Tilda Swinton)
“I was a student when I read Orlando for the first time, and I remember how for many days afterwards I walked around in a happy daze. Daring to transcend boundaries of gender, class, history, culture, geography…. this is a story—Woolf called it a biography—like no other. Our hero wakes up and finds himself turned into a woman, and delightfully, this transition takes place in Istanbul—Constantinople. Orlando is a novel about transformations and journeys—from man into woman, from the West to the East, from one existence to the next and vice versa.” -ES
Notes of a Native Son by James Baldwin (also rec’d by Joan Didion & Uzo Aduba)
“Istanbul, London, Madrid, Boston…ever since my childhood I lived in numerous countries. One of the downsides of a nomadic life is that you can never keep a proper library. At some point, I had boxes of books in Istanbul, waiting to be shipped, boxes of books in Arizona. You have to let go of even your most beloved possessions when you live a peripatetic life, but there was one author whose voice I could never do without: James Baldwin—the observer, the commuter, the rebel. Notes of a Native Son is a collection of essays about language, racism, hatred, and ultimately, resilience and dignity.” -ES
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald (also rec’d by David Bowie, Florence Welch, Haruki Murakami, Hunter S. Thompson, Jackie Collins, John Krasinski, Richard E. Grant, Ta-Nehisi Coates & Williams S. Burroughs)
“You can adore this book for multiple reasons. The story, the style, the craft… There are no heroes here, just human beings, with all their flaws and failures. Although it is a book about a certain place and a time, and the dark side of the American Dream, it equally feels timeless and placeless, such is its universal appeal. The Great Gatsby is not a story you can read once and put aside, it is a book that deserves to be reread at different stages of life—a companion rather than a classic.” -ES
Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides (also rec’d by John Waters & Scarlett Johansson)
“One of the most beautifully told family sagas in world literature. Exploring gender identity, ethnic identity, American dream, immigrants, family memories and collective myths… but to me this is primarily a novel about belonging—how we fail but still somehow find the hope and the will to continue to try to belong.” -ES
Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde (also rec’d by Emma Watson, Ibram X. Kendi, Janet Mock & Noname)
“A remarkable collection of essays by a remarkable woman. Lorde’s views on race, gender, homophobia, xenophobia, class discrimination… To me this book is a manifesto of multiplicity. In an age in which we are all reduced to single identities and pushed into artificial tribes, Lorde’s intersectional and touchingly human approach is like a balm. It is a book about love, resilience and sisterhood.” -ES
The Arcades Project by Walter Benjamin (also rec’d by Patti Smith)
“This book is a house with multiple doors, endless corridors and windows into eternity. No two readings of The Arcades Project can ever be identical. After you finish it, the way you perceive the city you live in won’t be the same again. Streets and arcades, modernity with its illusions and promises, all told through the eyes and wanderings of a flaneur…. It is an unfinished project, but then again, perhaps a book of this magnitude could never have a definite end. Benjamin is an extraordinary thinker, a lonely rebel, an odd revolutionary that doesn’t quite fit into any tribe, a man of immense intellect and hopeful despair, and in the words of Hannah Arendt, a failed mystic. I love all of that about him.” -ES
An Artist of the Floating World by Kazuo Ishiguro (also rec’d by R.F. Kuang)
“Set in post-Second World War Japan, this is a masterfully written novel by the British-Japanese author about ageing, solitude, art, memory and the endless tricks it plays on our minds… Ishiguro is the kind of writer who each time asks the reader to trust him, come along for a walk in an unknown territory, and if need be, change perspective. But he does all this with an unwavering modesty and quiet intelligence that only further contributes to his literary strength.” -ES
You Will Hear Thunder by Anna Akhmatova
“How do you continue to write, to create beauty and aspire for freedom, under the darkest regimes? Akhmatova is brilliant—she is a fighter, a witness of her time, a thunder. The woman who makes me wish I could speak Russian. But reading her in translation is no less a treat for the mind and the soul.” -ES
Tales From The Thousand And One Nights by Anonymous (also rec’d by Gabriel García Márquez, Isabel Allende & Jorge Luis Borges)
“Many people in the West might not be aware of how much this collection means to younger women across the Middle East. Not only each particular story, and sub-story, but also the very storyteller behind, the great Shehrazad, is inspiring. The style is playful, the themes both universal and daring. Forget the sugar-coated Disney version; there is a core inside this world classic that was, and still is, quite forward-looking.” -ES
The Captive Mind by Czeslaw Milosz
“Much has been written about authoritarianism and its multiple manifestations, but little has been said about the ways in which people, even the most educated, seemingly open-minded people, internalise authoritarianism in their daily life. What happens to politics and politicians under a corrupt system is obvious. But what happens to a society and a culture under authoritarianism is a question less understood. The Polish poet, essayist and thinker Milosz wrote extensively about home, homeland, exile, memory, history…. As a writer who comes from a turbulent land of collective amnesia, I have always read him with a sense of affinity.” -ES
(via One Grand Books; photo by David Hartley)
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