Three generations of women from a well-connected, wealthy Iranian family navigate the different faces of exile in a dynamic and complex debut novel
In the opening chapter of Sanam Mahloudji’s dynamic first novel, marital strife, intoxication and an arrest for solicitation are merely the prelude to a scene in which $30,000-worth of jewels and watches are flung from a sparkling Aspen ski slope.
The woman responsible for most of that is Shirin, a Houston-based events organiser holidaying with her extended family. Consistently provocative and self-dramatising, Shirin makes a kind of performance art out of her snowballing midlife crisis, but hers is just one of five contrasting perspectives from which this matrilineal saga is told.
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