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In the aftermath of the Iranian revolution, rare-gem dealer Isaac Amin is arrested, wrongly accused of being a spy. Terrified by his disappearance, his family must reconcile a new world of cruelty and chaos with the collapse of everything they have known. As Isaac navigates the terrors of prison, and his wife feverishly searches for him, his children struggle with the realization that their family may soon be forced to embark on a journey of incalculable danger.
…The Septembers of Shiraz is a remarkable debut: the richly evocative, powerfully affecting depiction of a prosperous Jewish family in Tehran shortly after the revolution. In this fickle literary world, it's impossible to predict whether Sofer's novel will become a classic, but it certainly stands a chance…Sofer writes beautifully, whether she's describing an old man's "wrinkled voice" or Shirin's irritation at wearing a head scarf, imagining "there are tiny elves inside…crumpling paper against her ears all day long." And she tells her characters' stories with deceptive simplicity. Every member of the Amin family attains a moving, and memorable, depth and reality. Although their crisesand the philosophical questions they raiseare of the greatest urgency and seriousness, The Septembers of Shiraz is miraculously light in its touch, as beautiful and delicate as a book about suffering can be.
More Reviews and RecommendationsIranian-born writer Dalia Sofer hit it big with her debut novel, The Septembers of Shiraz, "as beautiful and delicate as a book about suffering can be." -- The New York Times
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April 30, 2009: The Septembers of Shiraz is an amazing debut novel. Ms. Sofer eloquently depicts the struggle that Jewish jeweler Isaac Amin and his family face after the Iranian revolution of the 1970s. The prose is beautiful and has an underlying sadness to it - obviously due to the subject matter (fear and suffering). The Amin family (Isaac, Farnaz, Shirin and Parviz) are fully developed, realistic and will remain with you long after the story ends. Enjoy the following excerpt:
She peers inside the shop through the glass. Nothing is left but dusty shelves, and a glass filled with turbid tea on the counter, along with a half-eaten sandwich, surrounded now by ants---Shahriar Beheshti's final lunch. "Looks like they got him recently."The Septembers of ShirazI believe that Ms. Sofer is an author to watch for in the future. I know I will be looking.Reader Rating:
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January 11, 2008: I am so glad that I stumbled over this book. Together with Khaled Housseins two books this is one of the best books that I have read this year. It is so intriguing and imposisble to put down. The plot is amazingly realistic and even my husband who prefers to read non-fiction couldn't put this book down until it was over and then we both were sad that there was no more of the book. Hope to get more from this promising author.
Name:
Dalia Sofer
Current Home:
New York, NY USA
Place of Birth:
Tehran, Iran
Education:
NYU, BA with major in French Literature and minor in Creative Writing; Sarah Lawrence College, MFA in Fiction
Dalia Sofer was born in Iran and fled at the age of ten to the United States with her family. She received her MFA in Fiction from Sarah Lawrence College in 2002 and has been a resident at Yaddo. In March 2007 she was the first recipient of the Sirenland Fellowship, given each year to an unpublished author to attend the Sirenland Writers Conference in Positano, Italy. She has been a contributor to NPR's All Things Considered, Poets & Writers magazine, the National Poetry Almanac of the Academy of American Poets, and The New York Sun. Her essays, "Of These, Solitude" and "A Prenuptial Visit to Chartres" were included, respectively, in the anthologies Yentl's Revenge: The Next Wave of Jewish Feminism (Seal Press, 2001) and France, a Love Story (Seal Press, 2004). She lives in New York City.
Author biography courtesy of HarperCollins Publishers
My first job was in retail in a clothing store on Madison Avenue. (It was the most ruthless job I've ever had, because I experienced, firsthand, the raw rudeness of people. Nowhere else can you find the sordid depths of the human soul than you can as a shop clerk on Madison Avenue!)
I like to take very long walks in the city - sometimes as long as seventy or eighty blocks. Walking shakes things up inside me. It is the best mood stabilizer.
I am fascinated by religious iconography. This began in Assisi, Italy, where I spent some time many years ago.
What was the book that most influenced your life or your career as a writer -- and why?
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
When I first read this book, in high school, I found it to be a simple but beautiful account of the lackadaisical spirit and eventual malaise of the 1920s. It was years later, on subsequent readings, that I took note of the many layers that make it such a rich and satisfying novel. Nick Carraway, the narrator, discovers Gatsby's story bit by bit - some parts true, others lies - from overheard gossip or from Gatsby himself. Flashbacks intersect with the present story of the summer of 1922, filling the gaps as the plot continues to move forward. In the end the pieces come together like those of an intricate puzzle. I was struck by Fitzgerald's use of symbols, such as colors. When Nick first sees Daisy Buchanan and Jordan Baker they are both wearing white dresses, which were "rippling and fluttering as if they had just been blown back in after a short flight around the house." This points to the women's innocence, but also to their lack of substance. Gatsby wears silver and gold when he goes to visit Daisy for the first time after five years, and the green light at Daisy's dock, which taunts Gatsby, symbolizes the simplified version of the American dream. Another prominent symbol is the vigilant pair of eyes over the "valley of the ashes," signifying the witnessing of the waste and purposelessness of the 1920s - a reference perhaps to T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land. The passage introducing the valley is filled with images of dust and smoke, and it is in this valley that carelessness finally ends with a death. I love, too, how Fitzgerald weaves the inevitable passage of time throughout the novel: Gatsby believes that time does not alter things. When he meets Daisy at Nick's house for the first time after five years, his nervousness makes him knock the clock over. Later, Daisy's child becomes a physical representation of the passage of time, and in the end Nick Carraway notes that it's his thirtieth birthday - a sobering realization that the "roaring twenties" are over. Like a hand-woven fabric that seems simple and straightforward at first glance, this book is constructed of multiple, delicate layers - only noticeable on close inspection. This, I think, is how a great book should be.
What are your ten favorite books, and what makes them special to you?
1. In Search of Lost Time (A La Recherche du Temps Perdu) by Marcel Proust.
I find Proust's writing absolutely mesmerizing. Like the mysterious workings of memory, which he famously captured in the tea and madeleine scene, the writing is non-linear, one thought or image leading to the next. I am also in awe of the scope of the work, which offers a rich, multilayered portrayal of French society in the early twentieth century, along with philosophical illuminations on the nature of love, friendship, and above all, art.
2. The Garden of the Finzi-Continis by Giorgio Bassani
This is a heartbreaking account of the days leading up to World War II in Ferrara, Italy, and the disintegration of a way of life for Italian Jews, particularly the aristocratic Finzi-Continis, who provide a sanctuary to other Jews in their lavish home but end up perishing in the camps.
3. The Amateur Marriage by Anne Tyler
I think Tyler has an uncanny ability to capture the countless nuances and shifts within relationships. In this novel, she masterfully traces the slow, painful dissolution of a long marriage made in haste in post-World War II Baltimore.
4. The Invention of Solitude by Paul Auster
This is a memoir in two parts - the first about Auster's elusive father, the second about Auster's relationship with his son. The story magically unfolds layer by layer, revealing ties, connections, coincidences, and tragedies that shed light on the way things are. This book, much like the human soul, is like a labyrinth, and I was all too eager to accompany Auster as he navigated his way through it.
5. Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
I was completely taken with this book from the very first page. Written as a letter by the 70-year-old preacher John Ames to his young son - the product of a late marriage, the novel is filled with luminous ruminations on life, religion, family, guilt, forgiveness, aging, and love. The writing is crystalline, filled with gorgeous imagery.
6. Death in Venice by Thomas Mann
The aging writer Gustav von Aschenbach takes a holiday in Venice, where he becomes infatuated with the beauty of fourteen-year-old Tadzio. I think Mann is a master at capturing the darker, less visible realms of human desire. Venice itself becomes a symbol of Aschenbach's slow disintegration, and by the end, the cholera that envelops the city (but remains hidden from the tourists by authorities who try to mask it with ammonia) foreshadows the fate of Aschenbach, who tries to mask his own degeneration with grotesque makeup.
7. My Name is Asher Lev by Chaim Potok
A beautiful account of how a boy from a Hassidic Jewish family must slowly relinquish his ties to his family as he grows as an artist. Art and religion don't always mix, and Potok paints a heartbreaking portrait of an artist who is made to choose between the two.
8. Maus by Art Spiegelman
Much has been said and written about whether the Holocaust can ever lend itself to humor. Maus, in my opinion, shows that it can, but only in the hands of someone as delicate, talented, and intelligent as Spiegelman. Told entirely through comic strips that are at once heartbreaking and humorous (the Jews are mice, the Germans are cats), these two volumes stayed with me long after I had put them away.
9. The Stranger (L'Etranger) by Albert Camus
Camus invented the idea of the "absurd," which refers neither to the absurdity of man, nor that of nature, but to the inability of the two to coexist. In this book, he captures this conflict through Meursault's inability to showcase the emotion expected of him at his mother's funeral, his quest the following morning for sensual pleasure on the sizzling shores of Algiers, and his final submission to the unbearably hot sun, which causes him to murder a man he doesn't even know. In a detached, unsentimental style, Camus paints the portrait of the "stranger"- who, we realize, is everyone. (I first read this book in high school and was completely mesmerized by it. It was an optimal time, no doubt, to be reassured that everyone else is a stranger too!)
10. Waiting by Ha Jin
I am amazed by how Ha Jin was able to make a protagonist as passive as Lin Kong so compelling. Having agreed to an arranged marriage, Lin, a doctor, spends the following decades of his life working and living in a military hospital (in Communist China) where he falls in love with a nurse, and attempting - but failing - on his yearly visits back home, to get a divorce. Much of this book, as the title suggests, is about inaction, but by carefully painting the many conflicts - both internal and external - that haunt the protagonist, Ha Jin turns this inaction into a forceful intrigue.
What types of music do you like? Is there any particular kind you like to listen to when you're writing?
Iranian classical music - such as Dastan Ensemble, Shahram Nazeri
Iranian pop (1970s): Googoosh, Haydeh, Satar
Pop/rock/folk (1960s & 1970s): Bob Dylan, Carole King, Neil Young, The Who, Serge Gainsbourg, Alain Souchon, Veronique Sansson, Charles Aznavour
Brazilian bossa nova: Chico Buarque; Elis Regina; Antonio Carlos Jobim; Joao Gilberto
If you had a book club, what would it be reading -- and why?
We would be reading poetry and prose written by a selection of poets, including Fernando Pessoa, Elizabeth Bishop, Emily Dickinson, and Pablo Neruda. This would give the group a chance to explore the relationships between these poets' verse and prose.
What are your favorite kinds of books to give -- and get -- as gifts?
I think photography books make wonderful gifts. Among the most beautiful books I've received are Iran Diary:1971-2001 (by the photographer Abbas) and Henri Cartier Bresson: The Man, the Image, the World.
Do you have any special writing rituals? For example, what do you have on your desk when you're writing?
I like to start with a good, strong, cup of coffee. I also tend to read some poetry before writing. (I try to read out loud if possible.) I usually write at home in the morning and head to cafes in the afternoon. At home, I like having my cat Leo nearby. Usually he sits on the bed and watches me for a while, then dozes off. (Admittedly, watching someone writing at a desk isn't very stimulating!)
Many writers are hardly "overnight success" stories. How long did it take for you to get where you are today? Any rejection-slip horror stories or inspirational anecdotes?
I started this book seven years ago. Prior to that, I had begun, and abandoned, two other novels. I think it takes many years and a lot of self-awareness to understand what it is you really want to say and how you want to say it. I don't have any rejection horror stories because I simply didn't send anything out until I felt I had something solid to share.
What tips or advice do you have for writers still looking to be discovered?
I really don't have any. I think every writer needs to find his or her own way.
In the aftermath of the Iranian revolution, rare-gem dealer Isaac Amin is arrested, wrongly accused of being a spy. Terrified by his disappearance, his family must reconcile a new world of cruelty and chaos with the collapse of everything they have known. As Isaac navigates the terrors of prison, and his wife feverishly searches for him, his children struggle with the realization that their family may soon be forced to embark on a journey of incalculable danger.
…The Septembers of Shiraz is a remarkable debut: the richly evocative, powerfully affecting depiction of a prosperous Jewish family in Tehran shortly after the revolution. In this fickle literary world, it's impossible to predict whether Sofer's novel will become a classic, but it certainly stands a chance…Sofer writes beautifully, whether she's describing an old man's "wrinkled voice" or Shirin's irritation at wearing a head scarf, imagining "there are tiny elves inside…crumpling paper against her ears all day long." And she tells her characters' stories with deceptive simplicity. Every member of the Amin family attains a moving, and memorable, depth and reality. Although their crisesand the philosophical questions they raiseare of the greatest urgency and seriousness, The Septembers of Shiraz is miraculously light in its touch, as beautiful and delicate as a book about suffering can be.
Like Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi's graphic memoir about the same period in Iran, this book's strength lies partly in Sofer's ability to characterize Iranians in any epoch: the obsession with saving face, the moments of sweetness between strangers, the interplay between Muslims and Jews that can be ugly or tender…The Septembers of Shiraz rises above being an ethnic novel about an intriguing place. It does not exoticize the Middle East or focus unduly on tempting targets such as women being forced to cover themselves or the persecution of Jews. These things exist, but they are part of a panoply of strangeness wrought upon everyone regardless of religion, gender or class. Instead, the book is about how people, in any country, live mostly without thinking about the political implications of their choices, and how they are taken by surprise when revolution or war crashes in. And how, even after the soul searching and the questions about whether they have led their lives the right way, they still care mostly about family, work, love and money. They are still, in the end, themselves.
Sofer's family escaped from Iran in 1982 when she was 10, an experience that may explain the intense detail of this unnerving debut. On a September day in 1981, gem trader Isaac Amin is accosted by Revolutionary Guards at his Tehran office and imprisoned for no other crime than being Jewish in a country where Muslim fanaticism is growing daily. Being rich and having had slender ties to the Shah's regime magnify his peril. In anguish over what might be happening to his family, Isaac watches the brutal mutilation and executions of prisoners around him. His wife, Farnaz, struggles to keep from slipping into despair, while his young daughter, Shirin, steals files from the home of a playmate whose father is in charge of the prison that holds her father. Far away in Brooklyn, Isaac's nonreligious son, Parviz, struggles without his family's money and falls for the pious daughter of his Hasidic landlord. Nicely layered, the story shimmers with past secrets and hidden motivations. The dialogue, while stiff, allows the various characters to come through. Sofer's dramatization of just-post-revolutionary Iran captures its small tensions and larger brutalities, which play vividly upon a family that cannot, even if it wishes to, conform. (Aug.)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business InformationIn Sofer's debut novel, Isaac Amin, a Jewish businessman in Tehran, is imprisoned following the Iranian Revolution. As Amin attempts to survive his brutal treatment and convince his captors that he is not a Zionist spy, his wife, young daughter, and son (a college student in New York City) find various ways to cope with the radical change in their way of life and the knowledge that they may never see Amin again. This is a story that needs to be told, as a reminder of how political and religious ideologies can destroy individuals, families, and societies. Yet the Amins are not portrayed as innocent victims but flawed human beings who closed their eyes to the injustices of the monarchy under which they benefited. The family and political issues raised in the book are timely and ripe for discussion; this should be a popular book club choice. Recommended for all public libraries.
An Iranian Jew waits wrongly accused in prison while his family slowly crumbles in Tehran and New York. In the wake of the Iranian Revolution, as the Ayatollah Khomeini's Republic is first being established, gem dealer Isaac Amin is arrested near his opulent Tehran home. Technically accused of being an Israeli spy, Isaac's real crimes are his religion and his personal wealth. As his interrogators try to break him with physical abuse and neglect, Isaac is most tortured by the memories of his family, with whom he is allowed no contact. On the homefront, the situation is similarly bleak. Isaac's beloved wife Farnaz tirelessly seeks information about her husband, and in doing so, begins to question the loyalty of the family's trusted maid, Habibeh, whose son (a former employee of Isaac's) has become an ardent member of the Republic. Isaac and Farnaz's precocious young daughter, Shirin, decides to take matters into her own hands, risking the family's lives when she steals confidential files from a classmate's home in the hopes of saving her uncle from the same fate as her father. And, an ocean away, son Parviz feels the strains in different ways, when both information and money from his family suddenly stops. He takes a room and job with a welcoming Hassidic man in Brooklyn, and, against his better judgment, falls in love with the daughter, Rachel. Eventually, Isaac triumphs over his accusers by bribing his way out of prison with a gift of his life savings. But the family's troubles are hardly over, and as they try to make their way out of the country to reunite their family overseas, young Shirin's well-intentioned plan threatens to curtail all their efforts. Sofer's characters are immenselysympathetic and illustrate plainly and without pretense the global issues of class, religion and politics following the Iranian Revolution. As intelligent as it is gripping.
Loading...Chapter One
When Isaac Amin sees two men with rifles walk into his office at half past noon on a warm autumn day in Tehran, his first thought is that he wont be able to join his wife and daughter for lunch, as promised.
"Brother Amin?" the shorter of the men says.
Isaac nods. A few months ago they took his friend Kourosh Nassiri, and just weeks later news got around that Ali the baker had disappeared.
"Were here by orders of the Revolutionary Guards." The smaller man points his rifle directly at Isaac and walks toward him, his steps too long for his legs. "You are under arrest, Brother."
Isaac shuts the inventory notebook before him. He looks down at his desk, at the indifferent items witnessing this event—the scattered files, a metal paperweight, a box of Dunhill cigarettes, a crystal ashtray, and a cup of tea, freshly brewed, two mint leaves floating inside. His calendar is spread open and he stares at it, at todays date, September 20, 1981, at the notes scribbled on the page—call Mr. Nakamura regarding pearls, lunch at home, receive shipment of black opals from Australia around 3:00 PM, pick up shoes from cobbler—appointments he wont be keeping. On theopposite page is a glossy photo of the H¯afez mausoleum in Shiraz. Under it are the words, "City of Poets and Roses."
"May I see your papers?" Isaac asks.
"Papers?" the man chuckles. "Brother, dont concern yourself with papers."
The other man, silent until now, takes a few steps. "You are Brother Amin, correct?" he asks.
"Yes."
"Then please follow us."
He examines the rifles again, the short mans stubby finger already on the trigger, so he gets up, and with the two men makes his way down his five-story office building, which seems strangely deserted. In the morning he had noticed that only nine of his sixteen employees had come to work, but he had thought nothing of it; people had been unpredictable lately. Now he wonders where they are. Had they known?
As they reach the pavement he senses the sun spreading down his neck and back. He feels calm, almost numb, and he reminds himself he should remain so. A black motorcycle is parked by the curb, next to his own polished, emerald-green Jaguar. The small man smirks at the sleek automobile, then mounts his motorcycle, releases the brake, and ignites the engine. Isaac mounts next, with the second soldier behind him. "Hold on tight," the soldier says. Isaacs arms girdle the small man and the third man rests his hands on Isaacs waist. Sandwiched between the two he feels the bony back of one against his stomach and the belly of the other pushing into his back. The bitter smell of unwashed hair makes him gag. Turning his head to take a breath, he glimpses one of his employees, Morteza, frozen on the sidewalk like a bystander at a funeral procession.
The motorcycle swerves through the narrow spaces between jammed cars. He watches the city glide by, its transformation now so obvious to him: movie posters and shampoo advertisements have been replaced by sweeping murals of clerics; streets once named after kings now claim the revolution as their patron; and once-dapper men and women have become bearded shadows and black veils. The smell of kebab and charcoaled corn, rising from the street vendors grill, fills the lunch hour. He had often treated himself to a hot skewer of lamb kebab here, sometimes bringing back two dozen for his employees, who would congregate in the kitchen, slide the tender meat off the skewers with slices of bread, and chew loudly. Isaac joined them from time to time, and while he could not allow himself to eat with equal abandon, he would be pleased for having initiated the gathering.
The vendor, fanning his grilled meat, looks at Isaac on the motorcycle, stupefied. Isaac looks back, but his captors pick up speed and he feels dizzy all of a sudden, ready to topple over. He locks his fingers around the drivers girth.
They stop at an unassuming gray building, dismount the bike, and enter. Greetings are exchanged among the revolutionaries and Isaac is led to a room smelling of sweat and feet. The room is small, maybe one-fifth the size of his living room, with mustard-yellow walls. He is seated on a bench, already filled with about a dozen men. He is squeezed between a middle-aged man and a young boy of sixteen or seventeen.
"I dont know how they keep adding more people on this bench," the man next to him mumbles, as though to himself but loudly enough for Isaac to hear. Isaac notices the man is wearing pajama pants with socks and shoes.
"How long have you been here?" he asks, deciding that the mans hostility has little to do with him.
"Im not sure," says the man. "They came to my house in the middle of the night. My wife was hysterical. She insisted on making me a cheese sandwich before I left. I dont know what got into her. She cut the cheese, her hands shaking. She even put in some parsley and radishes. As she was about to hand me the sandwich one of the soldiers grabbed it from her, ate it in three or four bites, and said, Thanks, Sister. How did you know I was starving?" Hearing this story makes Isaac feel fortunate; his family at least had been spared a similar scene. "This bench is killing my back," the man continues. "And they wont even let me use the bathroom."
Isaac rests his head against the wall. How odd that he should get arrested today of all days, when he was going to make up his long absences to his wife and daughter by joining them for lunch. For months he had been leaving the house at dawn, when the snow-covered Elburz Mountains slowly unveiled themselves in . . .
Excerpted from The Septembers of Shiraz by Dalia Sofer Copyright © 2007 by Dalia Sofer. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
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