Reviews:
(1 year ago) |
09 Feb, 2024
I found this book after some research for one of my challenges in 2016. It is wonderful! I am not sure what I expected - it is a memoir of a young Iranian girl, transplanted to the US prior to the revolution, her life and her family's life from then until now as a married mother, a writer. It is really a collection of vignettes of her extended family (which is huge!) and her parents. It is warm and delightful. And VERY funny! I love her sense of humor. And I love the knowledge and the gentle shouldering that she has so wisely imparted in her funny way. I highly recommend reading this.
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(2 weeks ago) |
18 Oct, 2025
Witty, memoirish short stories often featuring family, friends and acquaintances. I often repeated funny lines to my wife.
Reminds me of David Sedaris, who also reads his own audiobooks. But where Dumas tends to write light-hearted and kind stories about our common humanity, Sedaris tends to write darker, spikier, sometimes snarky stories about our eccentricities. Also, Sedaris is one of my favourite authors, and some of Dumas’ stories sounded like high school speeches.
Favourite stories:
Ch 7 “Bernice”: Fitting in?
Ch 10 “Of Mosquitos and Men”: Comfort vs adventure.
Ch 12 “Waterloo”: I knew that teachers can scar their students by telling them they will never be able to draw/do maths/swim… but this story made me realise that they do this to cover their own failure as teachers. Ouch.
Ch 20. “Girls Just Wanna Have Funds”: Terrible jobs done terribly
Ch 21. “Joyeuse Noëlle”: Like Sedaris’ Me Talk Pretty One Day. Apparently going to France and learning French is always hilarious.
Funny in Farsi also reminded me of the excellent Persepolis but without the pictures.
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(1 year ago)
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03 Jul, 2024
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