The Septembers of Shiraz
Dalia Sofer, . . Ecco, $24.95 (340pp) ISBN 978-0-06-113040-3
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.
Reviewed on: 04/16/2007
Genre: Fiction
Downloadable Audio - 978-1-4561-0994-3
Hardcover - 340 pages - 978-0-330-44769-0
Open Ebook - 368 pages - 978-0-06-146500-0
Other - 368 pages - 978-0-06-146505-5
Paperback - 368 pages - 978-0-06-113041-0
Paperback - 354 pages - 978-1-4472-4268-0
Peanut Press/Palm Reader - 368 pages - 978-0-06-146503-1