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Loading... Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Booksby Azar Nafisi
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. So..I felt pretty intellectual reading this book. It's about a lady professor in Iran and her experiences during the revolution. She is a thinker and is constantly battered down by the Islamic regime. She finds a escape in fiction -- reading and teaching it. The book is divided into sections: Lolita, Gatsby, James, & Austen. I really enjoyed re-learning about these different works of literature and the lengths the people in Iran had to go to just to read and discuss them. I must admit that most of the time her thoughts were a little over my head, but maybe that was just because I was listening to it and sometimes my mind wandered.. So poignant to learn about the way people had to slowly give up their freedom. I definitely would not want to be a woman in Iran. ( )Listening to this on a Playaway. Narrated by Lisette Lecat, of [book: The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency] audiobooks.*** UPDATE ***This was perhaps not a good choice for a Playaway. I feel somewhat disoriented because of the narrative structure; the author drifts among descriptions of modern life in Tehran, synopses of her book discussions with her students, and lecture-style literary criticism of Nabokov and others. Also difficult to tell when a chapter begins with a lengthy quotation (such an easy thing to see on the page, with typesetting clues to guide you!). I am also unable to fully distinguish Nafisi's students from one another, which makes for frustrating listening. That's not Nafisi's fault, but a limitation of my own brain: my verbal skills are much more visual than auditory... I can't remember a word or name unless I can visualize its spelling!I did enjoy this, but I'm going to start over with the print version. More than just a diary of a book club, [book: Reading Lolita in Tehran] offers a deeply personal view of the Iranian Revolution and life in the Islamic Republic. Late in the book, the author admits, "I am too much of an academic: I have written too many papers and articles to be able to turn my experiences and ideas into narratives without pontificating."This is a forgivable offense, as Nafisi pontificates more eloquently than any literature professor I've ever heard. I can't recommend this highly enough. too many good books in the world to waste any more time on this book! Couldn't finish. This book did not live up to its promise. It purported to be a group of women in Iran forming a book group to be able to escape the restrictions of the regime, if only through fiction. It started off as this, but then veered off and became a wildly self-pitying, self-indulgent claptrap. As the "magician" quite rightly pointed out - the author blamed the Republic of Iran for everything, and it got rather tedious I'm afraid. If it had focussed on the books a bit more, and looked at different ways of viewing them, as it did in the first section with Lolita, this would have been a wonderful book. It just wasn't. no reviews | add a review
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Threaded into the memoir are trenchant discussions of the work of Vladimir Nabokov, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Jane Austen, and other authors who provided the women with examples of those who successfully asserted their autonomy despite great odds. The great works encouraged them to strike out against authoritarianism and repression in their own ways, both large and small: "There, in that living room, we rediscovered that we were also living, breathing human beings; and no matter how repressive the state became, no matter how intimidated and frightened we were, like Lolita we tried to escape and to create our own little pockets of freedom," she writes. In short, the art helped them to survive. --Shawn Carkonen
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:05 -0400)
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