
In this stunning personal story of growing up in Iran, Azar Nafisi shares her memories of living in thrall to a powerful and complex mother against the backdrop of a country's political revolution. A girl's pain over family secrets, a young woman's discovery of the power of sensuality in literature, the price a family pays for freedom in a country beset by upheaval--these and other threads are woven together in this beautiful memoir, Things I've Been Silent About, as a gifted storyteller once again transforms the way we see the world and "reminds us of why we read in the first place" (Newsday).
Azar Nafisi is a professor at Johns Hopkins University. She won a fellowship from Oxford and taught English literature at the University of Tehran, the Free Islamic University and Allameh Tabatabai University in Iran. She was expelled from the University of Tehran for refusing to wear the veil and left Iran for America in 1997.
Azar Nafisi is also the author of the New York Times best-selling memoir, Reading Lolita in Tehran, in which she shares her story as a teacher who gathered her female students in Iran to secretly read forbidden Western classics.
Theme by Danetsoft and Danang Probo Sayekti inspired by Maksimer