Add to library
You don't have any lists yet. Create one in My Library.
Go to My LibraryAdd to library
You don't have any lists yet. Create one in My Library.
Go to My LibraryHarold Fryin Beklenmedik Yolculugu
- Language
- Turkish
- Published in
- Publisher
- Pegasus Yayinlari
- Pages
- 368
- ISBN
- 9786053432661
What begins as a simple, hopeful act becomes a pilgrimage through the English countryside and the landscape of Harold's own life. The long walk gives him time to reflect on his past: his unremarkable career, his complicated marriage, and the deep-seated regrets he has carried for years. As he meets a series of strangers along the way, Harold's trek transforms from a quest to save a friend into an exploration of faith, grief, and the possibility of redemption, revealing that it is never too late to take the first step toward a different life.
Subjects
Original edition details
Other editions (33)
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry A Novel
2013 • Random House Publishing Group
English
Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2012 • Penguin Random House
English
De onwaarschijnlijke reis van Harold Fry
2016 • Dwarsligger®
Dutch
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry A Novel
2012 • Random House Publishing Group
English
Die unwahrscheinliche Pilgerreise des Harold Fry Roman
2015 • FISCHER Taschenbuch
German
Other editions

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry A Novel
2013 • Random House Publishing Group
English

Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2012 • Penguin Random House
English

De onwaarschijnlijke reis van Harold Fry
2016 • Dwarsligger®
Dutch

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry A Novel
2012 • Random House Publishing Group
English

Die unwahrscheinliche Pilgerreise des Harold Fry Roman
2015 • FISCHER Taschenbuch
German

Die unwahrscheinliche Pilgerreise des Harold Fry Roman
2014 • Fischer Taschenbuch
German

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry A Novel
2012 • Random House
English

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2012 • Doubleday
English

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2014 • Transworld Publishers Limited
English

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2012 • Doubleday
English

L'imprevedibile viaggio di Harold Fry
2023 • Giunti Editore
Italian

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2012 • Wheeler Publishing
English

ハロルド・フライの思いもよらない巡礼の旅
2013 • 講談社
Japanese

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2012 • Windsor/Paragon
English

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry Novel
2012 • Random House
English

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2015 • Doubleday Canada
English

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry The Uplifting and Redemptive No. 1 Sunday Times Bestseller
2023 • Tbs-Penguin Random House Wholesale
English

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2013 • Black Swan
English

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2013 • Doubleday Canada
English

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2012 • Doubleday Canada
English

De onwaarschijnlijke reis van Harold Fry
2012 • Cargo
Dutch

El insólito peregrinaje de Harold Fry
2014 • Publicaciones y Ediciones Salamandra S.A.
Spanish

El insólito peregrinaje de Harold Fry (Spanish Edition)
2012 • SALAMANDRA
Spanish

一个人的朝圣
2013 • 北京联合出版公司
Chinese

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
2013 • Black Swan
English

The Unlikely Pilgrimage Of Harold Fry The uplifting and redemptive No. 1 Sunday Times bestseller
2012 • Transworld
English

Die unwahrscheinliche Pilgerreise des Harold Fry Roman
2012 • Krüger
German

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry: A Novel
2012 • Random House Audio
English

Die unwahrscheinliche Pilgerreise des Harold Fry Roman
2013 • Fischer Taschenbuch
German

La lettre qui allait changer le destin d'Harold Fry arriva le mardi
2013 • Éd. France loisirs
French

La lettre qui allait changer le destin d'Harold Fry arriva le mardi roman
2012 • XO éd.
French

La lettre qui allait changer le destin d'Harold Fry
2013 • Pocket
French

一個人的朝聖
2012 • 馬可孛羅文化出版
Chinese
Stepping out of his tidy house on Fossebridge Road to post the note, Harold was overcome. The inadequacy of his letter shamed him. He pictured Queenie dying alone at the far end of England, and he pictured himself returning to his silent house, and the thought was unbearable. He couldn't let the letter go. At the mouth of the postbox, he stopped. He would walk to the next one. And then the next. The snap decision was unlike him, a sudden surge of feeling in a body that had grown still. Days went by and nothing changed, yet here he was, walking away from the life he knew, with a letter in his pocket he could not send.
In a petrol station on the edge of town, a young girl with tired eyes and a badge that said HAPPY TO HELP spoke of faith. “You have to believe,” she told him, her simple certainty cutting through his confusion. “If you have faith, you can do anything.” The idea lodged in his heart with a bewildering insistence. Finding a telephone box, he called the hospice. He left a message, the words tumbling out of him with a clarity that was both terrifying and true. “Tell her Harold Fry is on his way,” he said, his voice ringing in the stuffy kiosk. “All she has to do is wait. Because I am going to save her, you see. I will keep walking and she must keep living.” With that, his unlikely pilgrimage had begun.
England opened beneath his feet. In his flimsy yachting shoes, Harold pushed north, a tall man stooped against a lifetime of low expectations. The physical world, once a backdrop to his daily drives, came alive with startling intensity. He saw the countless shades of green in the hedgerows, the pale flowers pooling at the roadside, the way the sun caught a distant window and trembled like a fallen star. The journey was punishing; his feet blistered, his muscles screamed. But with each step, he felt a freedom he had never known. Strangers offered him food, shelter, and encouragement. They saw in his simple, absurd quest a reflection of their own unspoken hopes, and in their belief, he found the strength to continue.
But the walk was not only a journey forward; it was a deep plunge into the past. With every mile, memories he had spent two decades avoiding surfaced with a wild energy. He saw his distant mother, packing her suitcase and leaving him with a father lost to drink. He saw his son, David, a brilliant, troubled boy whose gaze he could never quite meet. He remembered the day David swam out into a dangerous current, and Harold had hesitated, stopping to untie his shoes while a lifeguard saved his son. “Why had he stopped for his laces?” he knew Maureen had thought, and he had thought it too. The walk became a pilgrimage not just to Queenie, but through the landscape of his own failures.
Back in Kingsbridge, Maureen was adrift in a house suddenly too quiet and too large. Her first reaction was a familiar, brittle anger. “You can't save people from cancer, Harold,” she had snapped down the phone. “You can't even slice bread without making a mess.” But as the days turned into weeks, her fury softened into a hollow ache of loneliness. She lied to their neighbor, Rex, claiming Harold had twisted his ankle. She marked Harold's progress with pins and thread on a map Rex made for her, the blue line creeping slowly up the country, a testament to a resolve in her husband she had never known.
Then the world discovered Harold Fry. A journalist's story turned his private mission into a public spectacle. He was no longer alone. A band of followers joined him - Wilf, a fragile young man looking for a sign; Rich, a self-appointed leader with a taste for publicity; Kate, a woman walking away from her own pain. They called themselves pilgrims. For a time, Harold felt a sense of belonging, but soon the group's competing needs and ambitions fractured the simple purpose of his walk. His journey became a chaotic parade of press calls, sponsored T-shirts, and petty arguments. He had walked to be free, only to find himself trapped once more.
The pilgrimage imploded. The followers, led by Rich, raced ahead to claim a victory that was never Harold's to begin with, leaving him alone again. But this new solitude was different; it was filled with doubt and a profound weariness. The physical pain in his leg returned, and a deeper, spiritual exhaustion set in. He lost his way, walking in circles, the landscape blurring into an endless, repeating pattern of his own despair. He was just an old man in worn-out shoes, fooling himself. From a phone box in the Cheviot Hills, with the rain beating down, he called Maureen. “I can't do it,” he wept. “I want to come home.”
Eighty-seven days after leaving his home, Harold arrived at St. Bernadine's Hospice. There was no applause, no welcoming party. He was just a tired man in his socks, following a nun down a silent, sterile corridor. The woman in the bed was a stranger, a fragile shape beneath a white sheet, her head misshapen by a monstrous tumor that had stolen her voice and her face. This was not the Queenie he remembered. This was the brutal reality of what he had walked toward. His faith, his grand gesture - it had all been a fantasy. He had saved no one. All he could do was sit beside her, take her thin, claw-like hand in his, and bear witness to her quiet, lonely end.
On a bench by the sea, Maureen found him. He was a broken man, hunched against the wind. He told her everything - about Queenie, about his own foolishness, about the memories of their son that had tormented him. And as he spoke, she reached for his hand. “You did something,” she whispered, her voice thick with tears she no longer held back. “You got up, and you did something.” She looked at this stranger who was her husband, this man who had walked to the end of England and back into his own heart, and she saw again the boy she had fallen in love with across a dance floor. The journey had not saved Queenie, but it had saved them. Remembering a silly joke from the night they first met, a laugh escaped her, then another. Harold looked at her, and a smile broke across his weary face. And there, by the gray sea, with the tide coming in, they held on to one another and laughed until they cried.
No discussions yet for this book.
Delete Discussion
Are you sure you want to delete this discussion? This action cannot be undone.
Rating Sources
The book is widely praised for its profound emotional impact, with many readers describing it as deeply moving, poignant, and even tear-inducing. Reviewers highlight its ability to grip the heart, prompting reflection on one's own life, regrets, and opportunities for growth. The narrative is lauded for its exploration of significant themes such as the complexities of lifelong commitment, the value of friendship, humility, and the transformative power of human kindness and self-forgiveness. Readers connect with the journey of self-discovery undertaken by the main character, Harold, an ordinary man embarking on an unexpected quest, and the equally compelling internal journey of his wife, Maureen, finding their flawed humanity relatable. The writing style is frequently commended as wonderfully crafted, tender, and eloquently capturing the sweetness and difficulties of life without being cloyingly sentimental. Many consider it a remarkable debut novel that offers a unique and captivating reading experience.
Despite its widespread acclaim, some reviewers expressed reservations, finding aspects of the book less compelling. A recurring criticism points to the narrative becoming predictable or bordering on an overdose of pathos, with some labeling it as mawkish or trite. For these readers, the emotional manipulation felt too obvious, leading to a sense of detachment rather than immersion. Concerns were also raised about the pacing, with parts of the story feeling slow or plodding, potentially diminishing engagement. A few found the character portrayals of Harold and Maureen to be somewhat simplistic or less likable, and the central premise of an unprepared, spontaneous journey was questioned for its realism or perceived as a plot gimmick. Additionally, one reviewer noted an overuse of certain phrases and found some of the writing to be less sophisticated.
Ultimately, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry is widely regarded as a powerful and memorable book that resonates deeply with many readers. While it may not appeal to those averse to sentimental narratives or who prefer strictly realistic plots, its strengths lie in its heartfelt exploration of the human condition. It is highly recommended for readers open to being emotionally moved and who appreciate introspective stories about personal transformation, confronting the past, and finding hope and new beginnings later in life. The book particularly appeals to mature readers and those who enjoy character-driven narratives that delve into the complexities of ordinary lives and relationships, offering a journey that is both challenging and ultimately uplifting.
No reviews yet. Be the first to review this book!
Delete Review
Are you sure you want to delete this review? This action cannot be undone.







