queen Aba
There are some stories that echo among the ancient stones of the Mediterranean. Time passes, empires crumble, and seas erode the shores; yet certain cities remain unforgettable. This is because those cities were born not merely from stone, but from resistance, fear, betrayal, and human will. The Ancient City of Olba is exactly such a place.
Today, standing silently within the borders of Mersin on Turkey’s Mediterranean coast, Olba still carries the breath of the past with its temples, columns, monumental tombs, and a memory carved into the mountains. This ancient city is more than just the remains of a civilization; it is the story of a forgotten resistance, a lost people, and a woman left in the shadows of history.
This book tells the incredible trial of Aba, the first and only female ruler of Olba. Yet, this is not merely a historical narrative. This work depicts how fear transforms cities, how people begin to unravel before a war even starts, and how sometimes the greatest siege is laid not against the walls, but against the human soul.
In his work "Queen Aba – The Siege of Olba," Tolga Çağlayan, Turkey’s first Microdrama fiction writer, steps outside conventional narrative forms to invite the reader into a scene-by-scene, atmospheric, and cinematographic world. This structure, woven with the Microdrama technique, reveals great ruptures within brief moments, the fear that grows within silences, and the inherent conflicts of human nature.
Having already met readers in five different languages, this work is more than just a novel; it represents one of the first powerful steps of an original narrative style born in Turkey into world literature. "Queen Aba – The Siege of Olba" is an extraordinary literary experience that makes the petrified silence of history speak once more, bridging the past with the modern human spirit.
Olba still stands today. And some cities continue to speak, even long after they have fallen.