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1784154,808 (3.25)7
"Iran in the 1950s is wealthy in oil but riven by divisions of class, ethnicity, and religion, and its corrupt government is under foreign influence. At this volatile moment, an illiterate driver rescues a redheaded, blue-eyed baby girl who has been abandoned in a Tehran alley and names her Aria. When he can no longer care for her, he finds her a new home, setting her on an unlikely path from extreme deprivation to a life of privilege. Along the way, Aria acquires three mother figures with secrets of their own: one who abuses her, one who adopts her, and one whose role in her life is initially mysterious. At university, Aria is drawn ever further from her poverty-stricken past, until the 1979 revolution brings her various worlds violently together again. She and her friends are swept up in the excitement and danger as the shah is overthrown, but the final stage of the revolution will bring the Ayatollah Khomeini to power at the head of a brutal theocracy--just as Aria has become a mother herself. Nazanine Hozar's stunning debut gives us an unusually intimate view of a momentous time, through the eyes of a young woman coming to terms with the mysteries of her own past and future"--… (more)
  1. 00
    The Stationery Shop by Marjan Kamali (gypsysmom)
    gypsysmom: Set in Tehran during roughly the same time period
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» See also 7 mentions

Showing 4 of 4
Heartbreaking read ( )
  kakadoo202 | Oct 11, 2022 |
A coincidentally timely read with current events in Iran of street riots against an oppressive government. This tale is of earlier similar events. Starting with the toppling of Mossadegh and ending with the return of Khomeni and the establishment of the islamic republic. Told through the eyes of Aria, an orphan, foundling, her parents, real and adopted and her various friends. The author has thrown everything at it. Romance, jealousy, gay love, poverty, riches, politics, militantism, every religion finds a representative, Zoroastrian, muslim, christian, jewish, bahai. The ongoing series of coincidences linking all the participants stretches credulity sometimes. But nevertheless, it gives a flavour of Iran, a country that should be better known beyond its own boundaries. Simply told, more in the language of a young adult book. Could have been better. ( )
  Steve38 | Oct 4, 2022 |
I enjoyed this story despite finding it somewhat implausible. Interesting characters in a historically volatile setting. ( )
  LynnB | Aug 12, 2020 |
The author, Nazanine Hozar, grew up in Tehran but now lives in Canada. This is her first novel and it draws significantly on her Iranian heritage which gives this book a very realistic tone. I listened to this audiobook right after I listened to The Stationery Shop which is also set in Tehran in approximately the same time period. I thought this book was less romantic in tone than that book.

Aria was abandoned as an infant on a street in Tehran. Fortunately a soldier walking home to the apartment he shares with his wife found her in the nick of time. He took her home and named her Aria. While he is often away in the army camp his wife, Zahra, looks after Aria but she neglects her and Aria ends up with trachoma, an eye infection that can cause blindness if untreated. Zahra has to take Aria to the other side of the city for treatment and she certainly resents this "wasting" of her time. On one trip she runs across a woman that she used to work with in a wealthy family's home. The woman still works in the same house for Fereshteh and persuades Zahra to come for tea with Aria. Fereshteh and her family were Zoroastrians but all of the family members took Muslim names in order to fit in. Fereshteh is still wealthy and she often helps people in need. When she sees Aria's condition she is concerned and when her servant finds Aria alone in the apartment one day Fereshteh takes Aria into her home. With this turn of fortune Aria becomes educated and develops new friendships with two schoolmates. However she never forgets the neighbour boy who used to bring her bracelets. The man who found her keeps in touch but Zahra essentially abandons her. Fereshteh ensures that Aria helps people who have not been as lucky as she and sends her to help a poor Jewish family with four young girls. Although Aria intially hates going to this house she continues to visit and she helps one daughter learn to read who then manages to get a school certificate. As a background to Aria's life the political situation is going from a rather liberal style (as long as one does not run afoul of the Shah) to the conservative Muslim totalitarianism of the Ayatollah Khomeini and his fellow clerics. The ending is abrupt and will not satisfy those people who like everything wrapped up in a neat bow but it does allow the reader to ponder what might happen to Aria in the future.

I recommend this book to anyone who is interested in fiction set in an interesting place and time. ( )
  gypsysmom | Feb 2, 2020 |
Showing 4 of 4
If Aria embodies Iranian complexity, this story of her young life serves as a vehicle for the national story of the quarter-century leading up to the 1979 Islamic revolution.
 
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I saw many things on the face of the earth. I saw a child who was smelling the moon. I saw a door-less cage in which brilliance was fluttering its wings, a ladder from which Love was ascending to the roof of Heaven. I saw a woman pounding light in a mortar. -- Sohrab Sepehri (from "The Footsteps of Water")
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For my mother, Toba
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Mehri opened her eyes.
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"Iran in the 1950s is wealthy in oil but riven by divisions of class, ethnicity, and religion, and its corrupt government is under foreign influence. At this volatile moment, an illiterate driver rescues a redheaded, blue-eyed baby girl who has been abandoned in a Tehran alley and names her Aria. When he can no longer care for her, he finds her a new home, setting her on an unlikely path from extreme deprivation to a life of privilege. Along the way, Aria acquires three mother figures with secrets of their own: one who abuses her, one who adopts her, and one whose role in her life is initially mysterious. At university, Aria is drawn ever further from her poverty-stricken past, until the 1979 revolution brings her various worlds violently together again. She and her friends are swept up in the excitement and danger as the shah is overthrown, but the final stage of the revolution will bring the Ayatollah Khomeini to power at the head of a brutal theocracy--just as Aria has become a mother herself. Nazanine Hozar's stunning debut gives us an unusually intimate view of a momentous time, through the eyes of a young woman coming to terms with the mysteries of her own past and future"--

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It is the early 1950s in a restless Iran, a country powerful with oil wealth but unsettled by class and religious divides and by a larger world hungry for its resources. One night, a humble driver in the Iranian army is walking home through a neighbourhood in Tehran when he hears a small, pitiful cry. Curious, he searches for the source, and to his horror comes upon a newborn baby girl abandoned by the side of the road and encircled by ravenous dogs. He snatches up the child, and forever alters his own destiny and that of the little girl, whom he names Aria.
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