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Anne Sinclair Mehdevi

Author of Persian Folk and Fairy Tales

8 Works 66 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

She has presumably died by now (2025), but I can find nothing online.

Works by Anne Sinclair Mehdevi

Persian Folk and Fairy Tales (1914) 39 copies, 1 review
Persia revisited (1964) 6 copies
Persian Adventure (1962) 6 copies
Parveen (1969) 6 copies, 1 review
From Pillar to Post (1956) 4 copies, 1 review
Don Chato 2 copies
The Leather Hand (1961) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Mehdevi, Anne Marie Sinclair
Other names
Sinclair, Anne Marie (maiden name)
Birthdate
1922-09-12
Gender
female
Education
University of Rochester (BA|1940)
Short biography
"Married Mohamed Mehdevi (now an author and management analyst), June 5, 1945; children: Rafael, Alexander, Florence."
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Manila, Philippines
Places of residence
Puerto de Alcudia, Majorca, Spain
Disambiguation notice
She has presumably died by now (2025), but I can find nothing online.
Associated Place (for map)
Puerto de Alcudia, Majorca, Spain

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
From Pillar to Post is a series of episodes about the author's life as she tries to raise a family while following her Iranian-diplomat husband around the world in the late 1940s. It looks like they were all published individually in the New Yorker first and then later collected in book-form. From Mexico, to occupied Vienna, to the Spanish Isles, the author goes wherever her husband's career takes him. But sometimes home may be the most foreign place of all.

What's amazing to me in 2016 is show more how unconcerned she or anyone else is about the fact that she's a good Kansas girl married to an Iranian Muslim and raising at least nominally Muslim children (although she does joke about it in regards to some Mexican nuns). That certainly wouldn't be the case if she were writing these stories today.

The author writes in a very nice conversational style and is a natural storyteller, so if you like interesting mid-century stories of travel and domesticity, you may want to try and dig a copy up.
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SUMMARY: A collection of traditional Persian folktales and fairytales.

REVIEW: I think this is a wonderful international book for children. It is best for older children because the stories can be rather long at times, and also contain themes that may be difficult for young children to understand. Despite this, the book contains a wonderful variety of stories, featuring such interesting titles as: "The Tailless Jackal," "Ruba and the Stork," and "The Giant Okab." This is an entertaining way show more for children to get an introduction into Persian culture. show less
Teenage girl who grew up in USA goes to visit her father in Persia in early 1920's.

Cover illustration isn't from copy of my book; my copy is in much better shape.
Somewhat of a "cozy" read, despite descriptions of harsh life for some women at that time in Persia.

Awards

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Associated Authors

John Teppich Illustrator

Statistics

Works
8
Members
66
Popularity
#259,058
Rating
3.8
Reviews
3
ISBNs
5

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