Altun's prose has a dreamlike urgency--John Ashbery
Fighting the Ottoman invaders in Constantinople, Emperor Constantine XI
was killed--his body never found.
Legend has it that he escaped in a Genoese ship, cheating certain death
at the hands of the Turks and earning himself the title of Immortal
Emperor.
Five centuries after his disappearance, three mysterious men contact a
young professor living in Istanbul. Members of a secret sect, they have
guarded the Immortal Emperor's will for generations. They tell him that
he is the next emperor in line and that in order to take possession of
his fortune he must carry out his ancestor's last wishes.
What follows is his journey to the heart of a mystery of epic historical
significance.
Selçuk Altun was born in Artvin, Turkey in 1950. He is a retired
banking executive, a bibliophile and philanthropist. His novels, Songs
My Mother Never Taught Me and Many and Many a Year Ago, were listed
amongst the top one hundred translated crime fiction by the
International Association of Crime Writers. He lives in Istanbul,
Turkey.