World Famous Comics NetworkWorld Famous Comics Network World Famous Comics CommunityComic Book ClassifiedsSketchCards.com
WFC Home | About | Columns | Comics | Contests | Features | Freebies | Gallery | Links | News | Podcasts | Shop
SHOP >> David Mack | Andy Lee | Amy Allen | Michonne | Dean Haglund | Virginia Hey | WFC Published | WFC Auctions



ScheduleUPDATED TODAY! Wed, 8-Oct-2008
Anything Goes TriviaAnything Goes Trivia
Bob Rozakis
Megaton ManMegaton Man
Don Simpson
Not Available ComicsNot Available Comics
Matt Feazell
TrevorTrevor
Piper & Lee


NewsNEWS 7-Oct-2008 8:22pm
LEGO Batman: The Videogame review
Zach Snyder Charms Fanboys, Assures Them...
New Bibles alter form _ not word _ to dr...
O.C. comic artist turns McCain, Obama in...

Comic Book - Movie - Video Game - Anime 

Click here to organize, track and appraise your comic books!
Friends & Affiliates
Adobe Store
Amazon.com
Anime Studio
Apple Store
Dick Blick Art Materials
eBay
GoDaddy.com

StarWarsShop.com
TFAW
World Famous Comics: The Septembers of Shiraz: A Novel (P.S.)
The Septembers of Shiraz: A Novel (P.S.)
By: Dalia Sofer
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars
Binding: Paperback
Label: Harper Perennial
Number of Items: 1
Number of Pages: 368
Publication Date: May 01, 2008
Release Date: April 29, 2008

Enlarge Image
The Septembers of Shiraz: A Novel (P.S.)
List Price: $13.95
Used Price: $7.15
3rd Party New: $8.16
Amazon's Price: $11.16

You Save: $2.79 (20%)
Usually ships in 24 hours


Similar Items

The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit: A Jewish Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World (P.S.)

Away: A Novel

People of the Book: A Novel

The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story

Unaccustomed Earth
More Similar Items...

Editorial Comments

Product Description:

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.


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars

2 out of 5 starsCouldn't connect with the characters
I feel like I was reading a different book than the rest of the reviewers. To me, the characters were all distant and hard to connect with, which made it hard for me to feel an investment in their evolutions or futures. The most compelling character and the story I was most interested in was the subplot about the daughter and the files. She was the only character that felt real to me. I would have liked to read more about her, but the rest of the family I could take or leave. Had I not been on a plane when reading it, I probably wouldn't have finished the book, and I finish everything.



2 out of 5 starsDid I read the same book as everyone else?
After looking at the rave reviews for The Septembers of Shiraz, I chose it as my book club selection. Now I'm wondering what all the hype was about? While I find the subject matter compelling and heartbreaking, I found the writing and book to be neither. The characters lacked depth and were 2 dimensional at best, the ending was contrived and way too simplistic, and I felt as though I were hearing the story from someone who'd heard it second hand. When I finished the novel, I read "about the author," and it turns out I was right- I was hearing it third hand.
I had high hopes for this book, and I was very dissappointed.



3 out of 5 starsCompelling and personal tale, but not very well-written
The Septembers of Shiraz is a 3 1/2 star book that I would have upgraded to 4 stars if immediately after finishing it I hadn't started reading Ariel Sabar's My Father's Paradise: A Son's Search for His Jewish Past in Kurdish Iraq. Both books are based on the personal stories of the authors' fathers, each of whom ended up emmigrating from the Middle East with his family as a result of religious and cultural persecution. This book is written as a novel, and Sabar's is non-fiction, but the greatest dissimilarity is in the quality of the writing. And that is where "The Septembers of Shiraz" comes up short.

This book, about an Iranian Jewish family during the cultural revolution which brought the Ayatollah Khomeini and his Islamic fundamentalists to power, is divided into the points of view of the four family members: Isaac Amin, a wealthy jeweler, his wife, Farnaz, their daughter Shirin, and their son, Parviz. Isaac is jailed on charges of being a Zionist and his wife and daughter must try to cope in a Tehran in which the lower classes have power for the first time in their lives. Parviz, in the weakest of the tales, is studying at university in New York and living with a family of Hasidic Jews.

You can tell on reading the book that the tale is deeply personal to the author and one which she researched rigorously, from the conditions in Iranian prisons to what life was like for ordinary people during the revolution. It's also one that needs to be told. If you know nothing about the Islamic revolution in Iran, the book is likely to be compelling. But chapters don't so much end as they just stop abruptly, sections are written in the wrong tense, and for these and other reasons I can't quite put my finger on, I found myself picking the book up and putting it down again a few pages later, whereas I read over half of Safar's book in one sitting.

Sofer can perhaps be forgiven some of the clunky writing in that English is not her first language. But then it isn't Khaled Hosseini's first language either, and both The Kite Runner and One Thousand Splendid Suns are gorgeously written. If you want to learn about what was lost in the cultural revolution in Iran and read just one book about it, even Reading Lolita in Tehran, which makes what was lost in the revolution more poignant still, would be a better choice. Sofer has made a good first effort and one which is worth reading, just with lower expectations that those which the other reviews here might give you. Perhaps I'm less moved by the book than I ought to be because while Sofer makes you feel the pain of the Amin family and what they have lost, she never really gives you a sense of greater context. But I just finished the book today and it's already starting to slip away in the face of a tale (Safar's) that is full of more detail, more history and that broader context and is, somehow, more moving.



5 out of 5 starsSorrow and hope in the hands of a master storyteller
Masterpiece is defined as the superlative work of an artist and no word better describes Dalia Sofer's debut novel. "The Septembers of Shiraz" amazes by its sheer quietness and simplicity, and its impact is powerful for such understated prose.

It's 1981 in Tehran. Isaac Amin, a wealthy jeweler and gemologist, is accused of being a Zionist spy and is arrested by the Revolutionary Guards. Two years prior, the Shah of Iran, long reviled as a puppet of the Western world, had been deposed. The revolution that ousted the shah is now paving the way for fundamentalist Islam and the emergence of the Ayatollah Khomeini. It doesn't matter that Isaac is not a subversive; it is enough that he is Jewish and successful.

Isaac's son, Parviz, is an architectural student in New York. As the chaos in Iran worsens and his father languishes in jail, beaten and tortured, the young man is forced to grow up and fend for himself without his parents' remittances. Along the way, he's befriended by his Jewish landlord from whom Parviz learns some valuable lessons in faith, survival and choices.

Meanwhile, Isaac's wife, Farnaz, desperately searches for her husband. She begins to see firsthand the rapid collapse of her country and realizes that life will never be the same again for anyone of them.

What's of note in Sofer's style is her assured command. From beginning `til end, the novel is orderly, accessible, evocative, and affecting, devoid of the trickery of excessive sentimental narrative. (To see this adapted on film would be a pleasure, especially if helmed by Iran's premier director, the equally understated and talented Majid Majidi.)

In one of Parviz's classes, his professor lectures that..

"A good structure...must have two characteristics: strength and beauty. For a building to be strong, it must accomplish what it was designed to do, and do so efficiently, without an excess of stone, glass, steel. For it to be beautiful, it must reflect its maker's definition of beauty, whatever that definition may be. For only then can it be said that the structure exists honestly."

And that is exactly what Sofer's writing is--strong, beautiful and honest. It's appropriate that the author's name is Sofer, which is Hebrew for `writer', for the label is borne well by this young author. Through Isaac, she has given us an "education in grief," but more importantly, she has given us an education in hope. This is writing from the soul, the best kind there is.



5 out of 5 starsA great, poignant story
The story of a jewish man and his family caught in the aftermath of the "departure" of the Shah of Iran in the 1980's. This is the kind of book you can't let go of and you need to keep reading. You feel for the characters as the chapters unfold.


Related Categories:Similar Items

The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit: A Jewish Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World (P.S.)

Away: A Novel

People of the Book: A Novel

The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story

Unaccustomed Earth
More Similar Items...

Books
 Comics
  Comic Strips
  How to Draw Comics
  How to Draw Manga

 Graphic Novels
  AiT/Planet Lar
  Alternative Comics
  Archie Comics
  Avatar Press
  DC Comics
    Batman
    Justice League
    Superman
  Dark Horse Comics
    Hellboy
    Sin City
    Star Wars
  Drawn & Quarterly
  Devil's Due Publishing
  Dreamwave
  Fantagraphics Books
  Gemstone/Gladstone
  IDW Publishing
  Image Comics
  Kitchen Sink Press
  Marvel Comics
    Fantastic Four
    Spider-Man
    Wolverine
    X-Men
  Oni Press
  SLG/Slave Labor
  TwoMorrows
  Top Shelf Productions

 Manga
  ADV Manga
  Antarctic Press
  Central Park Media
  Digital Manga
  Gutsoon
  TokyoPop
  Viz Communications

 Books
  Animation
  Antiques & Collectibles
  Art Instruction & Ref.
  Art Reference
  Arts
  Business
  Cartooning
  Children's
  Computer Graphics
  Computers & Internet
  Digital Business
  Drawing (general)
  Entertainment
  Entrepreneurship
  Figure Drawing
  Games
  Graphic Design
  Horror
  Humor
  Literature & Fiction
  Movies
  Music
  Mystery & Thrillers
  Nonfiction
  Photography
  Pop Culture Collectibles
  Popular Culture
  Publishing & Books
  Reference
  Role Playing & Fantasy
  Sci-Fi & Fantasy
  Screenwriting Film
  Screenwriting TV
  Sketchbooks/Journals
  Stationary
  Teens
  Television
  Toys
  Video Games
  Writing

 Calendars


WFC Home | About | Columns | Comics | Contests | Features | Freebies | Gallery | Links | News | Podcasts | Shop

Classic Movies. Low Prices. Free Shipping on Orders over $50.

World Famous Comics Network
World Famous Comics Community
ComicsCommunity.com
Comic Book Classifieds
ComicBookClassifieds.com
SketchCards.com
SketchCards.com

GO SHOPPING >>

© 1995 - 2008 World Famous Comics. All rights reserved. All other © & ™ belong to their respective owners.
Advertiser Info . Terms of Use . Privacy Policy . Contact Info
World Famous Comics Network