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Tuesday 18 May, 2010
Abu Dhabi's Bestseller

 

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Olives & Lemons

Olives & Lemons
Traces of Cyprus Past



Shirley Kay
Falak Shawwa
€21.00

Product ID: RP-1-0021
Status: Available

Size: 210 x 290 mm
Pages: 152
Photography: Shirley Kay & Falak Shawwa
Binding: Paperback
Language: English
Publisher: Rimal Publications, Cyprus
Year: 2010
ISBN: 978-9963-610-35-8

 

ABOUT THIS BOOK

 

For most of its recorded history, the island has struggled under the rule of one foreign power or another, each bringing an alien religion or different doctrine to disturb the even tenor of country life. Perhaps the greatest upheaval of all, however, has occurred during the past half century. Until the mid-20th century, life had changed little for the people of the myriad villages scattered across the countryside. A visitor from the Middle Ages might have felt reasonably at home here. Once change began, however, it accelerated at an ever-increasing pace, altering the lives of virtually everyone on the island.

 

In this book Shirley Kay has tried to describe what is left of traditional life, the practices, beliefs and physical environment that have been the essence of Cyprus over the ages. Perhaps, after all, this age-old world of Cyprus village life will not be irrevocably lost, as she thought it must be when she first came to the village of Anogyra in the late 1980s. Today young people are beginning to renovate their grandparents’ abandoned homes for their own holidays or eventual retirement. And visitors to the island, who make their way to these attractive villages, will gain an insight into the heart of Cyprus.


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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Shirley Kay and her diplomat husband, Jolyon, first came to Cyprus in the late 1980s when their daughter and her family were posted to Episkopi. Shirley and the family were both fascinated by the old villages in the surrounding areas and they soon bought an old stone house in the village of Anogyra which served as their holiday home in Cyprus until 2007 when they settled there permanently.
In more than two decades visiting and living in Anogyra, they witnessed dramatic changes affecting the village which inspired Shirley to write this book and record what is left of traditional village life; a life that had attracted her family in the first place.
Before coming to Cyprus, Shirley spent more than 16 years living in various countries in the Middle East, and has written 15 books on many of the countries in which she lived. She studied European languages at Cambridge University, Arabic while living in Lebanon and Middle Eastern archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology in London. As a late starter, she has found Greek more of a challenge, but exploring the countryside for this book has certainly given her efforts a considerable boost.

Other books by Shirley Kay

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