April 20, 2026 - Set on the imaginary island nation of Estaran—positioned, with deliberate ambiguity, somewhere off the North Atlantic coast of Portugal—Acar Murat Boyner’s third and most ambitious work of fiction is a sweeping, meticulously constructed political novel that spans two decades of revolution, reform, and democratic collapse. It Always Rains in Estaran opens in 1919 and closes in 1940, tracing the full arc of a society that overthrows a theocratic monarchy, builds a secular republic from the rubble, and then watches, almost helplessly, as that republic is dismantled from within. The Faulkner epigraph that anchors the book—“The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”—is not decorative. It is the novel’s governing thesis.
The story begins with General Mateh Redes, the charismatic military commander who leads the Army for Progress in a civil war against the collapsing Abdor dynasty and its clerical allies, the Hurkis. When the King flees and the palace is found empty, Mateh surveys the deserted garden—a “mere patch of scentless shrubbery”—and immediately sets about replacing the old order with something new. Within weeks of taking power, his government bans religious courts, secularizes education, grants women equal rights and universal suffrage, and nationalizes the economy. The pace is breathtaking. So is the resistance.
Boyner has no interest in the simple story of a liberator. Mateh is a visionary and a pragmatist, but also a man willing to bomb a city into rubble when he deems it necessary, to silence opposition through fear as much as persuasion, and to mistake the speed of transformation for its depth. The novel’s sharpest structural insight is its insistence on showing the gap between the republic Mateh proclaims and the one he actually builds—and how that gap becomes the fault line through which catastrophe eventually rushes.
The novel’s second great figure is Sark, a young intellectual from a fishing family who becomes a key organizer of the Republican Development Party’s youth wing, then Interior Minister, and finally, at thirty-eight, Mateh’s chosen successor. Sark is a more fully inhabited character than Mateh—warmer, more conflicted, more aware of the costs of the choices around him. His relationship with Ely, the first lady who is his equal in intelligence and moral clarity, provides the novel’s emotional core. Their scenes together—particularly the late chapters in which they are placed under house arrest as a coup unfolds around them—are among the most affecting in the book.
The political opposition Sark faces is drawn with impressive specificity. Lutfi Elver leads a conservative Reform Party that channels religious discomfort with Mateh’s secularization into legitimate parliamentary channels. A Social Progress Party occupies the left. And then there is the Righteous Movement Party, the novel’s true antagonist—a fundamentalist faction that fuses religious grievance with political ambition, led by Hamze Devat and backed by the Blue Foxes, a paramilitary movement loyal to the militarist Esin Largaz. Boyner traces the Righteous Movement’s rise with uncomfortable precision: the way it exploits the dislocations of rapid modernization, weaponizes faith as a political instrument, and uses democratic procedures to hollow out democratic institutions.
The novel’s climax—a coup executed in the chaos following a terror attack, using the very emergency powers the republic’s defenders had invoked to protect it—will land with particular force on readers who have watched comparable sequences unfold in the real world. This is political fiction at its most purposeful: a story about how republics end not with a single dramatic blow but through the patient accumulation of compromises, the misidentification of enemies, and the fatal underestimation of those who understand power more ruthlessly than those trying to preserve decency.
Boyner—a Georgetown-educated political philosopher originally from Istanbul—brings a theorist’s precision to his narrative architecture without ever losing the forward momentum of a thriller. The novel’s chapter-by-chapter structure, each anchored by a specific date, gives the historical sweep an almost documentary gravity. Readers familiar with early twentieth-century secular reformism will catch glimpses of that turbulent era throughout—but Estaran is unmistakably its own place, with its own logic, and its story reaches well beyond any single historical analogue.
It Always Rains in Estaran is a novel about the difficulty—and the absolute necessity—of building something worth protecting. It is also, quietly and inexorably, a warning. In a season saturated with political noise, Boyner offers something rarer: political thought rendered as literature.
It Always Rains in Estaran by Acar Murat Boyner is available now. ISBN: 979-8273908482
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