Farhad is a typical student, twenty-one years old, interested in wine, women, and poetry, and negligent of the religious conservatism of his grandfather. But he lives in Kabul in 1979, and the early days of the pro-Soviet coup are about to change his life forever. One night Farhad goes out drinking
A Thousand Rooms of Dream and Fear
โ Scribed by Rahimi, Atiq
- Book ID
- 107597206
- Publisher
- Other Press
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 44 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
From Booklist
Starred Review Fiction can express pain and suffering as little else can, as in this slim novel set in Afghanistan in October 1979, a time between coups and the Soviet invasion. Narrator Farhad, a 21-year-old university student in Kabul, goes out drinking with a friend, forgets the curfew and password, and is apprehended by jackbooted soldiers who beat and kick him, leaving him unconscious in a sewer. Mahnaz, the widowed mother of a young son (her husband was jailed as a political prisoner and executed), takes him into her home. What might seem a simple, compassionate act is not only brave, exposing Mahnaz to danger when the returning soldiers search for the student, but also prohibited by the Muslim culture. Farhad, hallucinating and between life and death, stays for days with a woman without a husband and sees not only her hair but also her breast, as she offers her milk to her brother, a young man traumatized by repeated military torture. In prose that is spare and incisive, poetic and searing, prizewinning Afghani author Rahimi, who fled his native land in 1984, captures the distress of his people. --Michele Leber
Review
The language has the rhythm of a Sufi prayer; the novel offers an insight into the deepest fears of the people of Afghanistan._Los Angeles Times
_
That sense of losing ones identity, of being subsumed by a greater, if illogical, power, is a key theme in Atiq Rahimis taut, layered novel..._A Thousand Rooms of Dream and Fear_ is the intimate narrative...of an entire desperate, anguished country. _Washington Post_
An intensely intimate portrait of a man (and by extension his country) questioning reality and the limits of the possible...full of elegant evocations..._A Thousand Rooms of Dream and Fear *resonates deeply because, no doubt, Rahimi has written a true and sad account, but the story could easily be that of any other Afghan, of any other denizen of this modern, anarchic state. In the end, we are left to wonder whether Rahimi has presented us with a story, a dream, or a nightmare, though it is likely all three.*Words Without Borders_
An original and utterly personal account of the pressures a totalitarian society exerts on the individual in 1979 Afghanistan, before the Soviet invasion... A flawless translation does justice to Rahimis taut, highly calibrated prose. _Publishers Weekly
_
In prose that is spare and incisive, poetic and searing, prizewinning Afghani author Rahimi, who fled his native land in 1984, captures the distress of his people._Booklist_, starred review
Rahimi is an author known for his unflinching examination of his home country as much as the experimental styles in which he writes... _A Thousand Rooms of Dream and Fear takes risks in its structure...But Rahimis carefully-controlled new novel exploits these uncertainties, joining the past to the present and legend with fact, creating an appropriately surreal narrative, one that rings through with truth. ForeWord Magazine_
A taut and brilliant burst of anguished prose....both a wonderful and a dreadful little book. _The Guardian_
A beautiful piece of writing. Ruth Pavey, The Independent
Short but powerful...The beauty of the language lends this work a haunting clarity. _The Herald_
The novella is verbal photography...[it] seems the real thing...seamlessly translated. Russell Celyn Jones, The London Times
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### From Booklist _Starred Review_ Fiction can express pain and suffering as little else can, as in this slim novel set in Afghanistan in October 1979, a time between coups and the Soviet invasion. Narrator Farhad, a 21-year-old university student in Kabul, goes out drinking with a friend, forgets
Farhad is a typical student, twenty-one years old, interested in wine, women, and poetry, and negligent of the religious conservatism of his grandfather. But he lives in Kabul in 1979, and the early days of the pro-Soviet coup are about to change his life forever. One night Farhad goes out drinking
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