Aysegül Savas

The Anthropologists

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«Like Walter Benjamin, Aysegül Savas uncovers trapdoors to bewilderment everywhere in everyday life; like Henry James, she sees marriage as a mystery, unsoundably deep. The Anthropologists is mesmerizing; I felt I read it in a single breath.» -Garth Greenwell

“Savas is an author who simply, and astoundingly, knows.” -Bryan Washington

Asya and Manu are looking at apartments, envisioning their future in a foreign city. What should their life here look like? What rituals will structure their days? Whom can they consider family?
As the young couple dreams about the possibilities of each new listing, Asya, a documentarian, gathers footage from the neighborhood like an anthropologist observing local customs. “Forget about daily life,” chides her grandmother on the phone. “We named you for a whole continent and you're filming a park.”
Back in their home countries parents age, grandparents get sick, nieces and nephews grow up-all…
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140 printed pages
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Quotes

  • Julia Bobakhas quoted23 days ago
    It’s tough to see parents age, Ravi said. Mine get a little stranger every year.

    Manu argued that his parents still had it together. Parents are bound to be a little strange, he said. They’re parents.
  • Julia Bobakhas quotedlast month
    Forms of Enchantment
    By our bedside was a blue-green bowl filled with bundles of herbs and branches, tied together tightly like brooms.
    Next to the bowl was a candlestick, a small lacquered box we’d found at the flea market, a lamp in the shape of a tulip. I never got tired of this assembly, those small and beautiful things gathered with mystery. Perhaps it was because these objects didn’t quite belong to us—they were not part of an aesthetic either of us had grown up with.

    At university, Manu and I had known people who burned sage, whose rooms were filled with objects of ritual from foreign countries. These people also had a knack for picking out clothes from yard sales and vintage shops—things that would have looked awkward on us, because we didn’t have the right attitude, that sense of playful entitlement that was its own language.

    Every time we burned herbs before going to bed, Manu would make a joke to ward off the feeling that we were impostors.

    Shall we burn some trees?

    Let’s start a forest fire, I replied.

    This was the great relief: that we did not consider each other strange.
  • Julia Bobakhas quotedlast month
    He propped the notebooks on a shelf above his bed, like postcards, alongside the empty picture frames. He loved these things of impractical poetry.

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