
Lara Croft GO
Games
App
Apple's iPhone Game of the Year 2015 Best Mobile/Handheld Game - The Game Awards 2015 Lara Croft...

Extinction Point #1
Book
First comes the red rain: a strange, scarlet downpour from a cloudless sky that spreads across...
Sci-fi alien apocalypse

Simple Life Together
Podcast
Let's face it...life can be pretty hectic. All the stresses of trying to balance careers, family...

Great British Shipwrecks
Book
For more than 30 years, internationally acclaimed wreck diver and best-selling author, Rod...

Pikalar by Anika Nilles
Album Watch
Anika is a drummer and songwriter based in Germany. All started fith her first EP, called ALTER EGO,...
rock instrumental

The Witch and the Hundred Knight 2
Video Game Watch
Follow the Hundred Knight in its journey through a witch-ravaged world. Young girls are contracting...
action role-playing

The Sisters Chase
Book
A gripping novel about two sisters who are left homeless by their mother’s death and the lengths...

Hazel (1853 KP) rated Stork Mountain in Books
May 25, 2017
Bulgarian-born, short storywriter Miroslav Penkov has turned to full-length novels with this captivating book, Stork Mountain. Set in the Bulgarian Strandja Mountains on the border of Turkey, he explores religion, mythology, the past and the present in a society affected by long-term political unrest.
The narrator, a young man who remains nameless throughout, relocated to the United States of America as a child after the fall of Communism. Now he returns to his home country to find his grandfather, an elderly man he lost contact with three years ago. However his real motive is purely for self gain: to sell his section of the family land in order to pay off student loans and his rising debt.
Naturally, things do not go according to plan. The protagonist finds his grandfather hiding in the village of Klisura, a place divided between the Christians and the Muslims. He also discovers that there is no longer any land for him to sell, making his journey fairly pointless. Instead of returning to the Western world, he stays in his grandfather’s house and, very slowly, begins to learn the truth about his family’s past, the man his grandfather once was, and the superstitious pagan activities still affecting some of the village’s inhabitants today.
Stork Mountain is full of the history, folklore and mythology of a little known about European country. Although ultimately a contemporary novel, there is a lot to learn about events that led up to southern Bulgaria’s current condition. As well as being informative, Penkov plays with his readers’ hearts by including a Romeo and Juliet-esque relationship between the narrator and a Muslim girl, and also reveals a similar affair between a younger Grandfather and the girl of his dreams.
Books containing politics are often reserved for those with particular interest in the topic, however Stork Mountain is suitable for a much larger audience. The inclusion of Bulgarian folklore adds a dark fairytale-like quality to the story; and the romance, something for the reader to latch onto.
On reading the blurb I jumped to the conclusion that this book would be boring. I was wrong. Whereas stories with similar themes can be hard going, Stork Mountain was fast paced and easy to read. There were a few confusions about who was talking or whether the narrative was about the past or the future, but these issues may be something that is improved upon as the author finds his groove in full-length novels.
Even if, like me, you have prejudged this book to be boring, I urge you to give it a go. You may find yourself pleasantly surprised. Miroslav Penkov definitely has a future in the world of literature.

Far and Away: How Travel Can Change the World
Book
In 1991 Andrew Solomon faced down tanks in Moscow with a band of Russian artists protesting the...

Barricade
Book
Kenstibec was genetically engineered to build a new world, but the apocalypse forced a career...