For readers willing to abandon the need for resolution, Beyaz Leke offers a rare gift: a permission slip to remain lost. In Arslan’s world, the white spot is not a problem to be solved, but a condition to be honored. Aslı Arslan (b. 1975) is a Turkish writer and literary critic. She studied philosophy at Boğaziçi University and has worked as an editor for several independent presses. Her works often explore the intersection of memory, landscape, and violence. Beyaz Leke is her fourth book.
Arslan is a master of the unexpected metaphor. A frozen river is described as “the earth’s scar, healed badly.” A map’s legend becomes “a dictionary of ghosts.” The Turkish text leans heavily on archaisms and regional dialects, creating a sense of temporal dislocation. (Translators will face a heroic task in rendering this.) Upon release, Beyaz Leke polarized critics. Some praised it as a masterpiece of minimalist existentialism, comparing it to the works of Clarice Lispector or Yashar Kemal’s more metaphysical moments. Others found it frustratingly opaque, accusing Arslan of privileging atmosphere over narrative momentum. Beyaz Leke - Asli Arslan
By the final page, the narrator has not found her sister, nor has she charted the white spot. Instead, she realizes that the spot has charted her . In a haunting final image, she pours a line of salt across her own doorstep—not to keep anything out, but to mark where her territory ends and the unknown begins. For readers willing to abandon the need for
Arslan, known for her fragmented, poetic prose and psychological depth (notably in her earlier works like Taş ve Gölge ), presents in Beyaz Leke a narrative that resists linearity. It exists in the liminal space between presence and absence, much like the "white spot" of the title—an unmapped territory, a blind spot on a chart, or the bleaching of color from a photograph. To summarize the "plot" of Beyaz Leke is to betray its texture. On the surface, the novel follows an unnamed female narrator—a cartographer or a researcher of maps—who returns to a provincial, snow-covered Anatolian town. She is ostensibly there to investigate a historical anomaly: a region left intentionally blank on old Ottoman maps, a "terra incognita" known locally as the White Spot. 1975) is a Turkish writer and literary critic