The author relates the stories of her American grandmother's love affair with an Iranian physician, her Iranian-American parents, and her own return to an Islamic Iran without the freedoms she experienced in the West.
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"Drawing on her remarkable personal history, NPR producer Davar Ardalan brings us the lives of three generations of women and their ordeals with love, rejection, and revolution. Her American grandmother's love affair with an Iranian physician took her from New York to Iran in 1931. Ardalan herself moved from San Francisco to rural Iran in 1964 with her Iranian American parents who barely spoke Farsi. After her parents' divorce, Ardalan joined her father in Brookline, Massachusetts, where he had gone to make a new life; however improbably, after high school, Ardalan decided to move back to an Islamic Iran. When she arrived, she discovered a world she hardly recognized, and one which demands a near-complete renunciation of the freedoms she experienced in the West. In time, she and her young family make the opposite migration and discover the difficulties, however paradoxical, inherent in living a free life in America.--From publisher description."--From source other than the Library of CongressThe author relates the stories of her American grandmother's love affair with an Iranian physician, her Iranian-American parents, and her own return to an Islamic Iran without the freedoms she experienced in the West.
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