Disoriental by Négra Djavadi - 2016 - Translated from French by Tina Kover - 2018
Lambda Prize - Best Bisexual Fiction - 2019
Albertine Prize Winner - 2019 - Reader’s Choice for best novel translated from French to English
National Book Award Finalist - 2019
These are just a few of the awards won by Négra Djavadi’s debut novel Disoriental.
The narrator, Kimiâ Sadr, emigrated at age ten, along with her family, from Iran to Paris. Now age twenty-five, she sits in the waiting room of a fertility clinic in Paris. She is flooded with memories of her families long tangled history. Her great grandfather had 52 wives, her parents were strongly opposed both to The Shaw and the clerics who followed him. She has a huge family. She just identifies her six uncles by number.
In a series of flashback like episodes The narrator tells in relays
The chaos of post World War Two Iran. The educated elite of Iran, her Family was once quite rich, had Cultural and emotional ties to France, especially Paris where lots of Iranian expats had homes, fled to Paris to escape extreme clerical rule.
As history of Iran is unsettlling told, we slowly see the narrator come to accept she is sexually attracted to women not men. Homosexual behaviour, mostly this happened to men, sometimes lead to death sentences.
The story line skips around a lot in time to contemporary Paris and Tehran to pre-revolutionary days in Iran and her families early days in France.
Technically Didoreintal is a stunning novel. The characters are very well developed.
I felt The chaos and sometimes terror of life in Tehran coupled with the strains of adjusting to life in Paris. To anyone willing to read carefully, I recommend this work.
Négar Djavadi was born in Iran in 1969 to a family of intellectuals opposed to the regimes of both the Shah and Khomeini. She arrived in France at the age of eleven, having crossed the mountains of Kurdistan on horseback with her mother and sister. She is a screenwriter and lives in Paris. Disoriental is her first novel..from Europa Editions.
2 comments:
A great review of what sounds like an interesting book. Thanks for sharing.
This is on my TBR but you make me want to run straight for it now!
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