Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel reservation - What documentaries and books about Turkish culture and history are worth recommending?

What documentaries and books about Turkish culture and history are worth recommending?

I have been to Turkey. Let me speak from my own experience. Other materials include: hand-painted trip to Turkey: I started to see Istanbul before going to Turkey, because it was too rough, and I didn't finish it until Egypt. . . However, it is this sense of being down and out that has a "astringent" taste and well reflects the ecology of the "declining empire". It is recommended to read it carefully. Liang Wendao also mentioned this when he opened the book for 8 minutes.

Then there are some reminders: Turkish girls are very, very beautiful, and Eastern European beauties are not covered. Some people can take photos with you because of your oriental face. The room rate is generally $65,438 +0. There should not be many people who can speak English now. Take your clothes with you when you visit the Bosphorus. There is an interesting painting (dedicated to Maria) on the porch of the exit of Hagia Sophia. Don't miss it.

The following is my feeling, which was written when chatting with the tour guide. It's really embarrassing. . . . . .

I hope it helps you ~ jet lag, I woke up after 5: 00 in the morning, unable to restrain my impulse, and wandered downstairs from the surrounding Istanbul. A person walking on the streets of a foreign country in the morning always has a sense of adventure and tension. I walked into an old shop where paintings of ships in the Bosphorus were hung, and I tasted lemon-flavored tea for only 0.25 lira. I spent half a lira in a bakery and ate a crisp and fragrant bread. I ran into a beautiful mosque, stopped to take pictures, and saw a beautiful Turkish girl dragging her luggage in a hurry and disappeared across the zebra crossing. An hour later, at dawn, I went back to the hotel, met Luffy and talked with him about many Turkish topics.

The plane flew above the clouds and finally saw the sunshine for several days. Istanbul, full of snow and sadness, gave me a wonderful time. It's like a man of great strength, with a tough Osman in his bones and a bunch of business lines connecting the East and the West in his muscles, but he is wearing a modern and open coat. Finally, rewrite Orhan's description of the Bosphorus as a tribute to Turkey: you will find Istanbul as beautiful as life, although it is sad.