While eleven-year-old Nazie has long been engaged to her cousin Moussa and anxiously awaits her marriage, fifteen-year-old Flora has been abandoned by her husband in the midst of a difficult pregnancy.
In a novel brimming with vitality and sensuality - smells, colours and textures float effortlessly off the page - Rabinyan examines the lives of these young Jewish girls in a Persian village at the beginning of the twentieth century. Persian Brides is a widely-acclaimed, vibrant and award-winning debut of immense emotional power.
“The energy of the writing is remarkable … It is as if we have entered the wildest of Chagall’s paintings.”
literary Review
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“A remarkable (and well-translated) extravaganza.”
sunday Telegraph
“Bursting with colourful stories and superstitions, the narrative seems to embrace whole lives rather than just two days… Rabinyan has a fresh and charming voice.”
independent On Sunday
“Lush, lyrical and disturbing… Rabinyan’s marvellously digressive style and rich prose give the story the feel of a night-long wedding feast.”
new York Times
DORIT RABINYAN was born in 1972 in Kfar Saba, Israel, to a Jewish family that had emigrated from Iran. Persian Brides is her first novel, which she wrote at the age of twenty-one, using her family stories. She has also written a book of poems and a second novel, Our Weddings (Bloomsbury, 2001).