Spotlight on Women in Iranian Literature: Excerpt from the Award-winning Novel Vis & I by Farideh Razi Translated from the Persian by Niloufar Talebi

We’re delighted to share an excerpt from the riveting novel Vis & I (l’Aleph, March 15, 2017), winner of the 1998 “Novel of the Year” Literature Award, written by the acclaimed Iranian writer Farideh Razi and translated from the Persian by the accomplished writer, translator, and multimedia artist Niloufar Talebi. Vis & I is an interior monologue during a harrowing cab ride through the streets of Tehran as Pardis rushes to the airport to stop her lover from leaving. Multiple narrative threads and flashbacks, real and imaginary voices–primarily that of Vis, the heroine of the Persian epic romance, Vis & Ramin–interweave in this gritty, postmodern love story. Vis & I poses the ultimate challenge: to exercise the strength of will that Vis has come to represent in the Iranian literary canon and psyche in the vindication of a forbidden love and being true to oneself. This is a compelling read we hope it will transport you. Happy National Translation Month and happy reading!

 —Claudia Serea and Loren Kleinman

Click HERE to read Spotlight on Women in Iranian Literature: Excerpt from the Award-winning Novel Vis & I by Farideh Razi Translated from the Persian by Niloufar Talebi

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Spotlight on Women in Iranian Literature: Two Poems by Soodabeh Saeidnia Translated from the Persian by the Author

Today we’re happy to share two exquisite poems written in Farsi and translated in English by their author, Soodabeh Saeidnia. Soodabeh immigrated to the US in 2014, and is now living in Kew Gardens, New York. Immigration was a trigger to her poetry and after that her poems have been published in different American magazines and literary journals. She writes both in English and Farsi, sometimes mixing the languages in the same poem. Find out more about her in the insightful interview “Wake Up and Write Something, or You Will Be Eaten Soon” on the Great Weather for Media web site. We hope you’ll fall in love with her poetry as we did.

—Claudia Serea and Loren Kleinman

Click HERE to read Two Poems by Soodabeh Saeidnia Translated from the Persian by the Author

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