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The Nights Are Quiet In Tehran

by Shida Bazyar & Ruth Martin (translator)

1979. Behsad, a young communist revolutionary, fights with his friends for a new order after the Shah's expulsion. He tells of sparking hope, of clandestine political actions, and of how he finds the love of his life in the courageous, intelligent Nahid.

1989. Nahid lives her new life in West Germany with Behsad. With their young children, they spend hour after hour in front of the radio, hoping for news from others who went into hiding after the mullahs came to power.

1999. Laleh returns to Iran with her mother, Nahid. Between beauty rituals and family secrets, she gets to know a Tehran that hardly matches her childhood memories.

2009. Laleh's brother Mo is more concerned with a friend's heartbreak than with student demonstrations in Germany. But then the Green Revolution breaks out in Iran and turns the world upside down ...

A topical, moving novel about revolution, oppression, resistance, and the absolute desire for freedom.


'We always think we know something about people, but then Shida Bazyar brilliantly shows us how much we still have to learn.'
-Olga Grjasnowa, author of City of Jasmine

'Bazyar's stories strike at the aching heart of exile. A pulsing longing for a better future lingers from its first page to its last. A quietly beautiful exploration of the trauma of losing one's homeland to a savage regime, the novel is testament to how hope and the revolutionary spirit endure in the face of crushing tyranny, how courage cannot be fully stamped out. It lies dormant, awaiting a time when it can again ignite new acts of bravery, new waves of revolution.'
-Rhoda Kwan, The Saturday Paper

'The Nights Are Quiet in Tehran fits the family novel mould in many ways- it spans generations, explores inherited trauma, and depicts the effects of politics on a family ... This highly political and touching novel gives a great insight into the political situation in Iran ... In translating this vision of authorial omnipotence - of an imagined freedom - Ruth Martin brings Shida Bazyar's politically urgent and thematically significant voice to English-speaking readers ... creating an experience that feels both immediate and compelling.'
-Ankita Harbola, Reading in Translation
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Pages:

288

Published:

Apr 2025

Format

Paperback

Publisher

Scribe Publications

ISBN:

9781761381416

1979. Behsad, a young communist revolutionary, fights with his friends for a new order after the Shah's expulsion. He tells of sparking hope, of clandestine political actions, and of how he finds the love of his life in the courageous, intelligent Nahid.

1989. Nahid lives her new life in West Germany with Behsad. With their young children, they spend hour after hour in front of the radio, hoping for news from others who went into hiding after the mullahs came to power.

1999. Laleh returns to Iran with her mother, Nahid. Between beauty rituals and family secrets, she gets to know a Tehran that hardly matches her childhood memories.

2009. Laleh's brother Mo is more concerned with a friend's heartbreak than with student demonstrations in Germany. But then the Green Revolution breaks out in Iran and turns the world upside down ...

A topical, moving novel about revolution, oppression, resistance, and the absolute desire for freedom.


'We always think we know something about people, but then Shida Bazyar brilliantly shows us how much we still have to learn.'
-Olga Grjasnowa, author of City of Jasmine

'Bazyar's stories strike at the aching heart of exile. A pulsing longing for a better future lingers from its first page to its last. A quietly beautiful exploration of the trauma of losing one's homeland to a savage regime, the novel is testament to how hope and the revolutionary spirit endure in the face of crushing tyranny, how courage cannot be fully stamped out. It lies dormant, awaiting a time when it can again ignite new acts of bravery, new waves of revolution.'
-Rhoda Kwan, The Saturday Paper

'The Nights Are Quiet in Tehran fits the family novel mould in many ways- it spans generations, explores inherited trauma, and depicts the effects of politics on a family ... This highly political and touching novel gives a great insight into the political situation in Iran ... In translating this vision of authorial omnipotence - of an imagined freedom - Ruth Martin brings Shida Bazyar's politically urgent and thematically significant voice to English-speaking readers ... creating an experience that feels both immediate and compelling.'
-Ankita Harbola, Reading in Translation
$37.00
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