Weekend Herald

Novella may change your world view

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Nahid has spent so much of her life surviving, she’s scarcely had time to live. Now, in a Swedish hospital, she learns she has stage four ovarian cancer.

That’s the jolting, if marginally cliched, start of this debut novella which comes at you like a sustained howl, demanding that we consider what we owe to others and how we define freedom and love.

Bonde takes us back over her protagonis­t’s life in Iran, from her birth as “a disappoint­ment” (the sixth girl in a family with no sons), to her admission into medical school and the pride of her liberal, Westernise­d family. She even wears miniskirts and styles her hair in a Farrah Fawcett mane.

But then she succumbs to the zealotry of handsome young Masood; devotes herself to resistance against the Shah’s crushing regime. “The revolution fell upon us like stars.” There is plotting, demonstrat­ions, police truncheons and guns, detentions and brutal interrogat­ions, the horrifying disappeara­nce of a 14-year-old sister, which rips Nahid’s life open.

The fundamenta­lism that follows is no better. She and Masood buy false passports, bribe their way out of the tormented country, shelter first in a refugee camp and then in a welcoming but totally foreign land.

Now she’s dying, and racked with rage, against the death of her father, the bewildered brutality of her husband, the cynical destructio­n of idealism she’s seen everywhere. And at her own misshapen life: she’s reached safety and lived for another 30 years but feels her time has always been grudgingly granted.

“We have already lost so much. Why should we have to lose more?”

She’s a challengin­g protagonis­t: abrasive, suffering, contemptuo­us, judgmental, relentless in her rejections and surgically honest.

Short, concussive chapters jerk with sentences that hammer like a machine-gun. Bonde manages to be tender without any sentiment, precise but never reductive. It’s a narrative arc that moves towards a wounded reconcilia­tion. It’s lit by moments of tranquilli­ty and something close to jo, but it’s never easy or mawkish.

The ending is simultaneo­usly heart-clutching and life-affirming, Read this short book and marvel; it shakes you to your centre.

 ??  ?? WHAT WE OWEby Golnaz Hashemzade­h Bonde (Fleet, $34) Reviewed by David Hill
WHAT WE OWEby Golnaz Hashemzade­h Bonde (Fleet, $34) Reviewed by David Hill

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