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Persian Mirrors: The Elusive Face of Iran by Elaine Sciolino
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Persian Mirrors: The Elusive Face of Iran

by Elaine Sciolino

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146241,620 (3.52)4
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Free Press (2001), Paperback, 416 pages

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nonfiction from a journalist's perspective. very slow, some insight into iranian culture. ( )
  drpeff | Jul 16, 2007 |
A great book! The author was first introduced to Iran when she flew with Ayatollah Khomeini into Iran. She spent the next twenty years covering events that have shaped the Islamic Republic. Presenting both her experiences with official representatives of Iran and the people throughout the country, Sciolino provides a provoking and in-depth view of the Iran. ( )
  amurphy | Jan 26, 2006 |
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Wikipedia in English (3)

Ali Khatami

Elaine Sciolino

Mohammad Khatami

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0684862905, Hardcover)

In 1979, a clerical revolution in Iran swept aside the inarguably corrupt government of Shah Reza Pahlavi and set in motion events that would make that nation a world pariah. In the place of one dictatorship came another, one led "by an old bearded cleric in a turban and cloak whose answer to the king's injustice was to wrap the country in a populist message of promise and smother it with an intolerant version of Islam."

So writes Elaine Sciolino, a reporter for The New York Times who entered Iran with the Ayatollah Khomeini and who remained there for more than 20 years, providing American readers with memorable accounts that were less, it seemed, about politics and religion than about human nature. For Iran is a mass of contradictions, she writes, a country many of whose leaders press for forward-looking change while serving a government that seeks a return to the distant past, and whose citizens constantly seek ways to experiment "with two highly volatile chemicals--Islam and democracy." In her book, Sciolino travels the length and breadth of Iran, interviewing national leaders and citizens, turning up stories of resistance and accommodation that are at once hopeful and cautious. (For instance, she writes, "Personal expression is entirely possible in Iran. You just have to be careful when and where you engage in it, and you have to be ready for nasty surprises when the rules change.")

Iran has been overlooked for too long, Sciolino suggests. Her book, both sympathetic and critical, makes a useful guide for those outside the country who seek to understand it better. --Gregory McNamee

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:24 -0400)

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