Product Details
The Virgin of Solitude (Modern Middle East Literature in Translation Series)

The Virgin of Solitude (Modern Middle East Literature in Translation Series)
By Taghi Modarressi

List Price: $29.95
Price: $15.56 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

25 new or used available from $11.00

Product Description

On the streets of Tehran, Nuri Hushiar knows his blond hair and blue eyes attract attention. While he relishes the attention he cannot avoid the uneasy feeling of being out of place. This sense of being exceptional and estranged is the hallmark of his character and the focus of his struggle in Taghi Modarressi's last stunning novel.

Set around the time of the revolution, The Virgin of Solitude follows the parallel lives of a transplanted Austrian woman, who has made Iran her home, and her grandson, Nuri, who desperately misses his mother but hides his longing behind a veneer of teenage bravado. As the turmoil of the revolution envelops the country, grandmother and grandson witness the dissolution of social, class, and political order, while searching for a sense of belonging.

Nasrin Rahimieh's translation captures the tone and mood of the original, rendering both Modarressi's subtle humor and assured prose with effortless precision.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1290762 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-11-30
  • Original language: Persian
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 381 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Booklist
Set in Iran on the eve of revolution, Modarressi’s posthumously published final novel is a closely observed study of estrangement, telling the parallel stories of teenage Nuri, a blond, blue-eyed Iranian, and his Austrian grandmother, who has lived in Tehran for decades. Feeling like a stranger wherever he goes, Nuri envies his grandmother’s capacity for, as he describes it, “finding a sense of familiarity in the face of alienation.” His dream is to join his mother in New York, where she has been living since the death of her husband and where his indulgent grandmother feels he belongs. His grandfather, a prominent senator, is not so sure. But revolution is in the air, and dramatic changes are in store for Nuri and his family. Modarressi, an Iranian American who died in 1997, was married to novelist Anne Tyler, who oversaw the translation of this ambitious novel. --Michael Cart

Review
A closely observed study of estrangement, telling the parallel stories of teenage Nuri, a blond, blue-eyed Iranian, and his Austrian grandmother. --Booklist

Taghi Modarressi represented the best of his generation of writers: an openness, a generosity of spirit, a playful seriousness and a love for writing that cut across the boundaries of time, and limitations of culture and politics. --Azar Nafisi, author of Reading Lolita in Tehran

About the Author
Taghi Modarressi was born in Iran and educated as a doctor. He continued his education in the United States and became a member of the Department of Psychiatry of the University of Maryland School of Medicine. He is the author of The Book of Absent People and The Pilgrim's Rules of Etiquette.

Nasrin Rahimieh is Maseeh Chair and Director of the Dr. Samuel M. Jordan Center for Persian Studies and Culture at the University of California, Irvine, where she is also professor of comparative literature. She is the author of Missing Persians: Discovering Voices in Iranian Cultural History, also published by Syracuse University Press.