Written during the Second World War while Hikmet was serving a
thirteen-year sentence as a political prisoner, his verse-novel uses
cinematic techniques to tell the story of the emergence of secular,
modern Turkey by focusing on the always-entertaining stories of sundry
characters from all walks of life. As his vignettes flash before our
eyes at movie-like speed, it becomes clear he is also telling the
turbulent story of the twentieth century itself and the ongoing struggle
between tradition, which trusts in God, and modernity, which entrusts
the world to human hands.