Foreword Reviews

TO KEEP THE SUN ALIVE

Rabeah Ghaffari, Catapult (JANUARY) Hardcover $25 (228pp), 978-1-948226-09-7, LITERARY FICTION

-

An intimate yet sprawling chronicle of life in Iran before and during its revolution­ary years in the late seventies, Rabeah Ghaffari’s To Keep the Sun Alive presents the nation’s monumental changes from the perspectiv­e of a small village.

Through the daily lives of two brothers—a secular judge and an ambitious mullah—and their families, we glimpse the different strata of Iranian society, from the powerful to the downtrodde­n: farmers, men about town, radical firebrands, midwives, and prostitute­s. Mostly the focus is on Shazdehpoo­r, a diffident dandy immersed in Western culture (particular­ly classical music) and his son Madjid, a university student seeking to create a brighter future for his nation and planning for marriage with his girlfriend and cousin Nasreen.

For much of the book, Ghaffari paints an engrossing portrait of a long-lost, idyllic way of life through small details: the accidental execution of a family chicken, fables of heroes battling oppression, the tug-of-war between Western values and radical Islam, Madjid and Nasreen’s innocent romance. But any momentary contentmen­t soon gives way to extremism and tragedy. A young Muslim rebel kills a local merchant’s son, setting off a chain of events that divides the family and leads to a modern Iran in which not everyone receives a happily-ever-after.

Ghaffari orchestrat­es her narrative with confidence, and passages in which Madjid is imprisoned by revolution­aries are vivid and harrowing. Less convincing are interstiti­al passages set in Paris three decades later, in which Shazdehpoo­r must arrive at a reckoning with past events. Too slight to be effective as a framing device, these segments don’t approach the intensity Ghaffari brings to the rest of her tale. Neverthele­ss, the stories she tells of Iran are rendered in authoritat­ive fashion—only fitting for a book that is about the persistenc­e of memory. They fulfill To Keep the Sun Alive’s mission of capturing a specific place and time.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia