The timeless original classic that sparked the sensational series "Forbidden Love"—known as Amor Prohibido (Spanish), Amor Proibido (Portuguese), Zabranjena Ljubav (Croatian and Bosnian), Dragoste Interzisă (Romanian), Απαγορευμένος Έρωτας (Greek), and Забранена Любов (Bulgarian)—a global phenomenon beloved across continents!
Step into the gilded salons and shadowed corridors of late 19th-century Istanbul, where passion and duty collide in a world on the brink of modernity.
In a dazzling mansion on the Bosphorus, the beautiful and restless Bihter seeks escape from her manipulative mother by wedding the distinguished, much older Adnan Bey. Yet beneath the veneer of respectability, desire simmers: Bihter’s heart is drawn to Behlül, Adnan’s charming and reckless nephew.
As secrets ignite and betrayals unfold, the fate of an entire family hangs in the balance. Forbidden Love is a masterwork of psychological depth and social critique, exposing the fragility of happiness and the destructive power of longing. Uşaklıgil’s novel, often called the first true modern Turkish novel, offers a lush, immersive portrait of a society torn between tradition and the allure of the West—a story as timeless and devastating as Anna Karenina or Madame Bovary.
Dare to cross the threshold, where every glance conceals a secret and every love has its price.
Halit Ziya Uşaklıgil (1866–1945) was a prominent Turkish novelist and a leading figure in the modernization of Ottoman literature. Born in Istanbul into the Uşakizade family, he received his early education in both Istanbul and Izmir, attending French schools that exposed him to Western literary traditions. This early engagement with European culture and literature significantly influenced his later works and contributed to his adoption of Western narrative techniques.
Uşaklıgil played a central role in the Edebiyat-ı Cedide (New Literature) movement, which sought to introduce contemporary European literary forms and sensibilities to Ottoman Turkish literature. As an editor and contributor to the influential journal Servet-i Fünun, he helped shape the intellectual and artistic direction of his generation. His novels, most notably Aşk-ı Memnu (Forbidden Love), are celebrated for their sophisticated narrative structure and their nuanced exploration of character psychology, aligning Turkish fiction with the major currents of European literature at the turn of the twentieth century.
Throughout his career, Uşaklıgil faced challenges related to censorship and shifting political climates, particularly during the reign of Sultan Abdul Hamid II. Despite these obstacles, he remained a prolific writer, producing novels, short stories, plays, and memoirs. In addition to his literary pursuits, he held various administrative positions during the late Ottoman and early Republican eras. Halit Ziya Uşaklıgil’s contributions are widely recognized as foundational to the development of the modern Turkish novel, and his works continue to be studied and celebrated in Turkish literature.