Books tagged with 'iran': 10

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Iran Awakening: A Memoir of Revolution and Hope (SIGNED)

by...Shirin with Azadeh Moaveni Ebadi     average rating...3.0 / 5
tags...iran nonfiction womens
shelved by...judith_richards
viewable entries...none
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Lipstick Jihad: A Memoir of Growing Up Iranian in America And American in Iran

by...Azadeh Moaveni     average rating...4.0 / 5
tags...american iran iranian memoir nonfiction women womens
shelved by...judith_richards midsummernd roach808
viewable entries...none
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Embroideries

by...Marjane Satrapi     average rating...4.0 / 5
tags...graphic graphicnovel iran memoir novel sex sexuality storytelling women
shelved by...kdreichert06 moogle oceanlistener roach808
viewable entries...2

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entry by...oceanlistener     updated...Jun 23, '07     spoilers...n/a

I don't think I enjoyed this book as much as I did Persepolis one and two, probably because this group of women could almost be anywhere rather than the book being about Iran or her life.

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entry by...roach808     updated...Apr 20, '08     spoilers...minor

A short, adorable glimpse into the lives of Iranian women of several ages set over afternoon tea. Though not the 3rd in the Persepolis series as anticipated it is another gem from this Iranian turned Parisian.

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Guests of the Ayatollah: The Iran Hostage Crisis: The First Battle in America's War with Militant Islam

by...Mark Bowden     average rating...4.0 / 5
tags...america iran islam religion war
shelved by...oceanlistener
viewable entries...1

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entry by...oceanlistener     updated...May 15, '07     spoilers...n/a

I knew next to nothing about the Iranian hostage crisis, so this book was a real page-turner for me. 63 Americans were held hostage for 444 days in Iran.
This book had a great amount of detail without feeling bogged down. He described the entire period of the hostage crisis, what hte hostages went through, and the political climate in Iran and the US.
What amazes me is how little every other country cared. They pretty much all pretended that there was nothing wrong and carried on diplomatic relations with Iran as normal.
The degrees of hypocrisy in the Iranian students who took over the embassy was also amazing. They seemed to truly believe that they were making Iran a better place and that people would respect them if they took innocent Americans hostage.
Shame what it did to Carter.

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Persepolis 2: The Story of a Return

by...Marjane Satrapi     average rating...3.5 / 5
tags...age coming comingofage dictatorship graphic iran of politics regime war
shelved by...kdreichert06 oceanlistener roach808 sebethis
viewable entries...3

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entry by...oceanlistener     updated...Mar 05, '07     spoilers...n/a

In the sequel to Persepolis, she returns from Europe to Iran. She decides to live with the totalitarian regime in order to be near her family. This book is great at showing the pattern of the dictatorship and the mind control. It's amazing how they got the courage to live their lives under the regime the way they did.
Like Persepolis, I found the graphic novel format to be really interesting. Her pictures add so much to the story with minimal text.

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entry by...roach808     updated...Apr 20, '08     spoilers...n/a

The second installment of Satrapi's life story is poignant, honest, funny, sad, and everything you can think of. A graphic novel set that is worth your time - it won't be long - you can zoom through it!

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entry by...sebethis     updated...Feb 26, '07     spoilers...n/a

Finished 2/25/07.

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Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood

by...Marjane Satrapi     average rating...4.3 / 5
tags...comingofage graphic graphicnovel iran memoir memoirs novel war women
shelved by...kdreichert06 moogle oceanlistener roach808 sebethis
viewable entries...3

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entry by...oceanlistener     updated...Mar 03, '07     spoilers...n/a

I'm not really familiar with many graphic novels, so I didn't really know what to expect from this one. I really enjoyed both the story and the style of the drawings. They didn't detract at all from the story, but instead greatly assisted it with it's simple representations of a child's story.
Parts of it were very amusing, but it also deals with the dark side of the revolution and the Iraq/Iranian war. I don't know much about that time period or the players involved, so I need to look that up.
I can't wait to read the sequels.

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entry by...roach808     updated...Aug 16, '07     spoilers...none

I was skeptical about a graphic novel, but really, this is ingenious and beautiful and wild and caring.

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entry by...sebethis     updated...Feb 26, '07     spoilers...n/a

Finished 2/24/07.

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Not Without My Daughter

by...Betty Mahmoody, William Hoffer     average rating...4.0 / 5
tags...biographical crosscultural iran islam women
shelved by...slowtostart
viewable entries...1

'confronting and sensational'

entry by...slowtostart     updated...Feb 05, '07     spoilers...minor

No doubt few women could be as strong as Betty Mahmoody was in keeping her daughter and herself safe for 18months in Iran and then escaping back to America. This book was a great read - but I am a keen reader on anything to do with women and Islam. This was a different view; an American Christian marrying and living with an Iranian Muslim away from what both of them were used to in America. Personal, involving but also at times deeply insightful into the intricacies of a culture so different to that of the West, I loved reading such a unique story.

The whole time I read the book I had no idea it was part of a strategy on behalf of Betty Mahmoody to educate women who might be in a similar situation what she experienced. That changed my perspective. I got the impression that Betty's personality was a little alarmist, explaining how close to death each action would bring her, but this is probably quite appropriate and not for me to judge. Hoping that Betty's objective is successful and that other women read her story, these explanations could act as lessons on how-to or not-to go about things.

This will stay with me for a long time.

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Chicken with Plums

by...Marjane Satrapi     average rating...5.0 / 5
tags...graphicnovel iran musician tragic
shelved by...moogle
viewable entries...none
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Persepolis 2

by...Marjane Satrapi     average rating...5.0 / 5
tags...graphicnovel iran memoir
shelved by...moogle
viewable entries...none
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Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books

by...Azar Nafisi     average rating...3.8 / 5
tags...austen books censorship current defendingfiction east events feminism fitzgerald friendship iran lolita memoir middle middleeast miller nabokov nonfiction politics reading readinggroups reading_groups_women war women womens
shelved by...AstorDragon baileybrd24 bookgirl82 cverge judith_richards kdreichert06 lizie123 MarianV moogle mytobereadlist nikkums nmaloney oceanlistener Retrogirl roach808 wvrunna221
viewable entries...6

'A Must Read'

entry by...nmaloney     updated...May 17, '06     spoilers...n/a

I have recommended this book to many, many people and everyone who read it was happy they did.

Azar Nafisi was an English Literature Professor at Tehran University during the Iranian Revolution. She documents the chaotic times and the effect the revolution had on the Iranian people.

This book is a gallant defense of fiction, particularly the American novel. The author held a classroom trial on the Great Gatsby which pitted student against student. It was fascinating to see the effect that that book had on the Iranian students of the time. This scene made me vow to read more fiction -- because it is important for the soul.

Another storyline in the book centers on the plight of her female students during the revolution. Some joined her for a secret book group to continue reading novels and talking about them. She documents their discussions and her analysis of Pride & Prejudice, The Great Gatsby, Daisy Miller and Lolita.

I can't recommend this book highly enough, Nafisi is a wonderful writer and her subject matter is compelling on many levels.

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entry by...Retrogirl     updated...Nov 07, '07     spoilers...n/a

Summary~

"We all have dreams - things we fantasize about doing and generally never get around to. This is the story of Azar Nafisi's dream and of the nightmare that made it come true." "For two years before she left Iran in 1997, Nafisi gathered seven young women at her house every Thursday morning to read and discuss forbidden works of Western literature. They were all former students whom she had taught at university. Some came from conservative and religious families, others were progressive and secular; several had spent time in jail. They were shy and uncomfortable at first, unaccustomed to being asked to speak their minds, but soon they began to open up and to speak more freely, not only about the novels they were reading but also about themselves, their dreams and disappointments. Their stories intertwined with those they were reading - Pride and Prejudice, Washington Square, Daisy Miller and Lolita - their Lolita, as they imagined her in Tehran." Nafisi's account flashes back to the early days of the revolution, when she first started teaching at the University of Tehran amid the swirl of protests and demonstrations. In those frenetic days, the students took control of the university, expelled faculty members and purged the curriculum. When a radical Islamist in Nafisi's class questioned her decision to teach The Great Gatsby, which he saw as an immoral work that preached falsehoods of "the Great Satan," she decided to let him put Gatsby on trial and stood as the sole witness for the defense.

My Thoughts~

A good friend of mine had recommended this book to me, and I was eager to read it, yet didn't expect the great memoir that it turned out to be. The novel is set in 80's and 90's Iran, and documents the life of Azar Nafisi as a professor, confidante, intellectual, woman, and Iranian. The first and fourth sections (subtitled Lolita and Austen) detail her life in a more present day after she has resigned her teaching positions, leading a private reading group of former students. The second and third sections (Gatsby and James) document her rise as a teacher, the ways in which she met the girls that would people her group later, and her struggles as a woman throughout the Iranian Revolution and the reign of the Ayatollah Khomeini. These sections are really an insight into the struggles of not just women, but of all Iran's citizens who were not rabid fundamentalists during the revolution, and the tumultuousness that characterized their lives: when one day it was allowed to walk unveiled and eat ice cream in public and the next day it was not. Perhaps one of the most enlightening things for me was to learn that the rigidity of Iran's conservative, Islamic policies fluctuated: at times travel restrictions were loosened, and artistic performances were forgiven, and at other times, they were all shut down. But the most skillfully crafted aspect of this book is how Nafisi manages to incorporate the themes of novels which she teaches at the University of Tehran into her daily life, and draw parallel between the mirroring scenarios. With Lolita, she describes a life that at any moment could be stolen away, and how a human's lack of empathy creates a villain, ruthlessly destroying others' dreams. With The Great Gatsby, she defends a more disrespectable, materialistic side of Gatsby, citing his pure and inalterable dream of Daisy and how that is honorable. Yet she draws conclusions that this dream cannot coincide with the corruption of society, as is similar to her students' dreams of Western society paired with an oppressive regime. With Henry James, she discusses different forms of courage, and the ways in which characters are apportioned different traits, possibly creating a scene where no individual stands out, but where each has some admirable qualities. And finally with Jane Austen's novels, she talks about her multivocality, and the ways all her characters play significant roles, as did all of her students in their tight nit reading circle: the ways in which she was affected by all of their plight. Lastly, and possibly most directed to their strife in Iran, Nafisi presents the ways in which Austen's characters are forced to express themselves: not by overtly sensual ways that her students covet, but by more hidden ways (the uses of language, posing desiress individuals as opposite, and creating dramatic tension by forcing characters to express themselves in ways not entirely adequate). These forced compliances closely resemble Iranian subservience under Islamic rule. The novel goes on to explore other subjects of hopelessness, loyalty, sacrifice (reasonable and unreasonable), glorification through vilifying, fictional/imaginative escapes, personality, and reality in limbo. And possibly the most heartwrenching idea is that amid Nafisi's and her students' attempt to avoid the government's forced unreality, they must flee to another world of fiction, which sadly doesn't either exist. This struggle to find a rooted existence is key to Nafisi's and all of her girl's hopes and dreams, from men to education to true freedom. This novel/memoir is perfect for anyone who loves to read about other books and their impacts, and draw parallels from novels and other societies in relation to their own lives. Amazing.

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entry by...oceanlistener     updated...Mar 04, '08     spoilers...n/a

Part memoir, part textual analysis of several classics, this was an alternatingly interesting and dull book. I was fascinated by the picture of intelligent Iranian women of all creeds and how they live their lives. Some of the ideas I had of Iranian women were borne out- like their reluctance of many to wear the veil. This book also gave me an idea of how they are still women, they still have friends and lovers and lives and are not completely subjugated by the law.
The analysis of the books they read took me back to college and was much less exciting. It was okay for the ones that I had read, and it helped that I recently finished Nabakov's memoirs. But for the stories I hadn't read, it was just boring and pretentious sounding.

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entry by...roach808     updated...Oct 02, '07     spoilers...none

I really wanted to love this book but just couldn't. I found her writing style amateur and annoying.

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entry by...lizie123     updated...May 30, '07     spoilers...n/a

A great insight into women's lives in Iran. Focuses on an underground literary group comprised solely of women, and the issues they face. Weaves in the stories of Lolita and other literary classics.

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entry by...judith_richards     updated...Oct 21, '07     spoilers...n/a

Interesting, but pretentious throughout.

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