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Product Description
In the 1970s, an Indian family moves to Tehran, as the father gets a job teaching English in the university there. With two young children, the parents set up home in an ancient and beautiful city. Here, the children learn to read and write Farsi, they go to school, and they begin to understand the deep connections the land of Persia has with India.
Then, everything changes as the Islamic Revolution occurs, followed by the Iran-Iraq war, and the old way of life in Iran is gone forever. Caught in a time of turmoil, the little girl and her brother try to make sense of a world gone upside down. Will they ever be able to go back to the way things were? Or will they be uprooted from the place they have always called home?
Persian Nights_weaves_a gentle and subtle story of family, upheaval, and crosscultural experiences. This is the story of an outsider who feels like an insider; a story about all that we have in common.1
Product Details
Title: | Persian Nights an Indian Child in Iran |
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Author: | Alaka Rajan Skinner |
Publisher: | Speaking Tiger |
SKU: | BK0506070 |
EAN: | 9789354479168 |
Number Of Pages: | 80 |
Language: | English |
Binding: | Paperback |
Country Of Origin: | India |
Release date: | 5 June 2024 |
Alaka has created a beautiful, and at times moving, account of her formative years. Descriptions of life in Iran are very interesting. But the power of the book comes from the universal themes of love, family, and resilience that we can all relate to. A book to be enjoyed by kids and adults alike.
it was a pleasant surprise to me as to how this book unfolded... it gives an intimate and relational view of a very global and polarising event without taking sides... the students becoming radicals and forcing behavioural changes onto society... it speaks about history from a place of relationship and upholding people - definitely worth a couple of reads...
an easy to go through, yet insightful overview of Alaka and her family's journey through the turbulent years in Tehran... it graphically describes the inner turmoil of people settled there as well as the uncertainty of the days ahead...
well written!