In his own words, having "learned to read and to write from his grandfather in very young ages", Kısakürek became "crazy about limitless, trivia reading" until the age of twelve starting from "groups of sentences belonging to lower class writers of the
French" Having been involved in
literature with such a reading passion, Necip Fazıl states that his "poetry started at the age of twelve" and that his mother said "how much I would like you to be a poet" by showing the "poetry notebook of a girl with tuberculosis" lying on the bed next to his mother's bed when he went to visit her staying at the hospital, and adds: "My mother's wish appeared to me as something that I fed inside but I was not aware of until twelve. The motive of existence itself. I decided inside with my eyes on the snow hurling on the window of the hospital room and the wind howling; I will be a poet! And I became". The first published poem of Necip Fazıl is "
Kitabe", a poem that was later included in his book
Örümcek Ağı (Spider Web) with the title "
Bir Mezar Taşı"(A Gravestone); it was also published in the
Yeni Mecmua (New Magazine) dated 1 July 1923. By 1939, his poems and articles were appearing in magazines such as
Yeni Mecmua,
Milli Mecmua,
Anadolu,
Hayat and
Varlık, and
Cumhuriyet newspaper. After returning home from Paris in 1925, Necip Fazıl stayed in Ankara intermittently. On his third visit, he published a magazine called
Ağaç on 14 March 1936 by providing the support of some banks.
Ağaç, the writers of which included
Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar,
Ahmet Kutsi Tecer and Mustafa Şekip Tunç, decided to follow a spiritualist and idealist line in contrary to the materialist and Marxist ideas supported by the writers such as Burhan Belge, Vedat Nedim Tör,
Şevket Süreyya Aydemir and İsmail Hüsrev Tökin of the closed
Kadro magazine owned by Yakup Kadri and which greatly influenced the intellectuals of the time. Kısakürek later transferred to
Ağaç () magazine published in six volumes in Ankara to İstanbul; however, unable to establish a viable reader base, the magazine was closed at the 17th volume. Necip Fazıl was among the contributors of the conservative magazine entitled
Serdengeçti. Necip Fazıl next began to publish the magazine called
Büyük Doğu (). Starting in 1943, the magazine was published intermittently as weekly, daily and monthly. In 1978, he was prosecuted because of his controversial articles and publications and the magazine was forced to close. Necip Fazıl also published a political humor magazine called
Borazan (Bugle), of which only three volumes were published. In 1971, Kısakürek began to publish "reports" about things happening in those days. Later on, he published them as a series called "Reports" numbered by their chronological. There are 10 of those reports and "Report 9" is the most known one, cause of contains writings against Erbakan and his "Milli Görüş" movement. ==Bibliography==