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Fiction

Timely, timeless

Intergenerational Iranian loss

The Nights Are Quiet in Tehran by Shida Bazyer, translated from German by Ruth Martin

by Theodore Ell
August 2025, no. 478

The Nights Are Quiet in Tehran by Shida Bazyer, translated from German by Ruth Martin

Scribe, $29.99 pb, 266 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

It would diminish this novel to describe it as ‘timely’. ‘Timeless’ is nearer the truth. The risk of a catastrophic breaking out involving Iran is a symptom of decades of tragedy, which novelist Shida Bazyar has conveyed here with a rare balance of vivid social realism and intimate introspection. The results are masterful.

Although the watershed years of 1979, 1989, 1999, and 2009 determine its structure, this novel is not a recital of Iran’s crises involving fundamentalist and liberalising forces. Rather, it depicts the personal stories of five members of a family in exile, whose entire existence is conditioned by yearning for a free Iran. Not even relocation to Germany, or the estrangement of younger generations from living memory of Iran, can erase that desire. Speaking in turn, each character – parents Behzad and Nahid, children Laleh, Mo, and Tara – narrates a fresh reckoning with political failure down the decades.

 


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The Nights Are Quiet in Tehran by Shida Bazyer, translated from German by Ruth Martin

Scribe, $29.99 pb, 266 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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