The New York Times: Η επίθεση λόμπινγκ του Πακιστάν – Βία των Ισραηλινών εποίκων – Η προσπάθεια των Νήσων Φερόε για δόξα – Πολιτισμική φτώχεια και μοναχικοί άνδρες – Η επίθεση στις δαπάνες του Πακιστάν βοηθά στην προσέλκυση του Τραμπ – Το Βόρειο Σέλας – Ο Χοσέ Αντόνιο Μοράντε Καμάτσο, αναμφισβήτητα ο μεγαλύτερος ταυρομάχος της γενιάς του, πάλεψε με τον τελευταίο του ταύρο – Τι παρακολουθούν… στα Νησιά Φερόε – Στην Κωνσταντινούπολη του 16ου αιώνα, τη σημερινή Κωνσταντινούπολη, το βασιλικό παλάτι απασχολούσε τόσους πολλούς ζαχαροπλάστες που είχαν το δικό τους αφιερωμένο τζαμί

Pakistan’s lobbying blitz
Israeli settler violence
The Faroe Islands’ bid for glory
Canadian-born Hungarian-British writer David Szalay during the Booker Prize ceremony in London on Monday. Kirsty Wigglesworth/Associated Press

Cultural poverty and lonely men

There are many books I love that proudly show off Dwight Garner’s endorsement. Sally Rooney’s “Intermezzo.” Percival Everett’s “James.”

And so when “Flesh” by David Szalay won this year’s Booker Prize, the first thing I did was look up Dwight’s review. At first, he didn’t really sell it to me: “To read this cool, remote book,” he wrote, “is to feel you are eyeballing the action on a bank of surveillance cameras.”

He never quite liked the book, he wrote, but he also “admired” it “from front to back.” That intrigued me. As did the subject matter: masculinity under duress. So I called him up and asked whether I should read it, and why.

Katrin: Tell me a little bit about this book.

Dwight: Well, you know, it’s called “Flesh.” I joke in my review that a better title might have been “Bones” because the book is very remote and chilly. Szalay’s prose is spare, and yet it has that sort of rich spareness of someone like Ernest Hemingway.

The book is about this diffident and lonely young man who grows up on a housing estate in Hungary and has a rough childhood. He eventually becomes a chauffeur in London for a wealthy family. And he insinuates his way in and begins to have an affair with the woman of the house. And before you know it, he’s wearing Tom Ford suits and flying on private jets. It’s a very complicated plot. But it’s largely about male friendship and the lack of it.

This concept of alienated manhood — does that capture something about our world today?

I think it does. You get the sense that this guy probably played too many video games when he was a kid. There’s a blankness to him that seems to come not just from poverty but also from cultural poverty. The kinds of things he’s had to feed his mind are very limited. And there’s just nowhere for him and the other men in this book to connect.

We’re living in this world now that lacks moral champions, and this book makes you feel that with almost a physical ache. There’s no one in this book to admire. All the characters are ugly in their own way. There’s no sense that a better education, a better upbringing, makes you a better person. It’s an amoral world that Szalay shows us.

The protagonist is an immigrant. But that sense of cultural alienation is not limited to immigrants.

Yeah, there’s so much longing in this guy. You feel the sadness in him. And part of that is just being untethered, being far from home. Really sort of having no home to return to.

We’re in kind of an in-between period in world history, and it kind of speaks to an in-between place that I think people feel themselves in, and a kind of uncertainty. The main character stumbles the way we’re all stumbling, but in a darker way. And I think that’s part of what Szalay wants to get at — a sense of rootlessness, or again, to use that phrase, cultural poverty.

I have a 9-year-old son. Your son is in his twenties. Do you think this sort of alienation is something that boys and young men like our sons are particularly grappling with?

My son played video games, but he turned out great! I think in this novel, you had someone who didn’t grow up with some of the benefits that my son had just by having a stable home. This character utterly lacked anyone to look up to. In today’s world, if you don’t have a lot going for you as a young man and all you really have to fall back on are your fists, I think it’s tough to discover what matters to you and what life is about.

Most of the novels I read are written by women, but that’s not by design. Are we seeing a decline in male literary writers?

I do think the action in the literary world has pivoted away, somewhat, from the young male novelist toward the young female novelist. It’s largely been a good development. But then you have someone like David Szalay who comes along and is so excellent at talking about male alienation that you realize you’re kind of missing some of these voices.

Is there a book people could read after this one? A sort of easy read to fall back on?

Absolutely. I’m not steering readers away from this book at all. I’m just warning them that this is a cold, austere read — in great ways. The big page-turning book of this year for me was “What We Can Know,” by Ian McEwan.

MORE TOP NEWS
Pakistan’s Prime Minister, Shehbaz Sharif, left, and Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir of Pakistan waiting for a meeting with President Trump in September. Alex Brandon/Associated Press

Pakistan’s spending blitz helps win over Trump

Pakistan has turned around its previously rocky relationship with the Trump administration, a shift that has been attributed to shrewd diplomacy by Islamabad.

But Pakistan also signed a series of high-priced contracts with prominent Washington lobbying firms this spring, just weeks before the White House announced favorable new policies that gave the country one of the world’s more enviable tariff rates and an edge over its archrival, India.

The campaign to influence President Trump included employing some of his closest confidants, my colleague Pranav Baskar reports.

OTHER NEWS
The BBC apologized to Trump for a misleadingly edited documentary about the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, but refused to pay any compensation.France commemorated the 10th anniversary of the 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris, which killed 130 people and injured more than 500.With Russia on the verge of capturing the strategic city of Pokrovsk, some commanders say Ukraine may be holding cities longer than it should.Israeli settlers burned a mosque in the occupied West Bank amid a surge of extremist violence in the territory.A former Syrian security official was indicted and charged with torture after living in plain sight in Europe for years.The family of a Colombian fisherman killed in a U.S. military strike on his boat is calling for justice.Jeff Bezos’ space company successfully landed its orbital rocket after its second launch, establishing itself as a serious challenger to Elon Musk’s SpaceX.
SPORTS

Football: Norway’s moment of World Cup glory was overshadowed by a video.

Running: Eliud Kipchoge, who made history with a sub-two hour marathon, plans to run seven marathons in seven continents.

COSMIC SHOW OF THE DAY
The Northern Lights in Whitley Bay on the east coast of England on Wednesday. Owen Humphreys/Press Association, via Associated Press

The Northern Lights

Two blasts of solar material crashed into the Earth’s magnetic bubble in space this week. They caused gorgeous light shows.

MORNING READ
José Antonio Morante Camacho at home in Spain. Ana Brigida for The New York Times

José Antonio Morante Camacho, arguably the greatest bullfighter of his generation, has fought his last bull. Now 46, Morante helped make bullfighting more popular across Spain, especially with younger conservatives. But his personal demons haunted him.

Morante said that fans thank him for destigmatizing mental illness. But, he added with a quivering smile, “it’s harder to stand in front of a bull.” Read more.

AROUND THE WORLD
Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

What they’re watching … in the Faroe Islands

The biggest underdog story in the World Cup qualifying rounds this year? The Faroe Islands.

Tonight, a large chunk of the 55,000 people who live on these rugged green specks in the North Atlantic will be watching their men’s football team face Croatia. The match is about more than just football. The Faroese are fighting to get independence from Denmark. They are autonomous but not sovereign: They don’t have full representation at the U.N., no Olympics team, no Eurovision act. That makes this a chance to show the world what they can do and come in even more energized to next year’s independence negotiations with Denmark, their biggest in a generation.

It’s going to be a tough fight. Croatia is one of the best teams in the world. Most of the Faroese squad have day jobs. But if they do pull this off, they will have a tiny chance of making it to the World Cup. (Make that teeny tiny. Because of qualifying nuances, Gibraltar would also have to beat the Czech Republic, which is unlikely.)

“We know it’s a small belief,” one player told me at the car dealership where he works. But they still have to believe, he said: “That’s the only way. You need to think big and go for it.” — Amelia Nierenberg, reporting from the Faroes

RECIPE
Esther M. Choi for The New York Times

In 16th-century Constantinople, now Istanbul, the royal palace employed so many pastry chefs that they had their own dedicated mosque. No treat was more celebrated than baklava.

The syrupy pastry’s origins are often debated: Iran, Azerbaijan and Greece have all claimed credit. But most food scholars agree that the main building-block of the dish — the thin pastry known in Turkey as yufka and elsewhere as phyllo — was pioneered by nomadic Turks. Learn to make it from scratch.

Antonis Tsagronis
Antonis Tsagronis
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