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7 Reviews
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Impressive!,
By VBS "VBS" (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The House of the Mosque (Paperback)
As an Iranian, who is raised in a modern family in Tehran, I am really impressed!
Part of book is not my story, but the story of old fashioned family in a small religious town. Very easy to follow (at least for me as an Iranian girl) and many of the things that happens in the book, has happened in Iran. I, myself think it was somhow a true story! I can imagine myself in the place. It shows how religion is being paled since Islamic revolousion in Iran. It shows why people like me moved from country and why I am so against any religion!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
`There was once a house, an old house which was known as the house of the mosque.',
By J. Cameron-Smith "Expect the Unexpected" (ACT, Australia) - See all my reviews (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: The House of the Mosque (Paperback)
In the house of the mosque, located in Senejan, Iran, the family of Aqa Jaan has lived for eight centuries. The house is currently occupied by the families of Aqa Jaan, a merchant who is the head of the city's bazaar; Alsaberi; the imam of the mosque and Aqa Shoja, the mosque's muezzin. The carpets woven by the family firm are renowned for their beauty, their patterns are drawn from the plumage of birds Aqa Jaan's wife traps on the roof of the house. This is the order of things in Senejan, in 1969: a rich past continuing into the future. The grandmothers sweep the floors each morning, and dream of travelling to Mecca. Sadiq is waiting for a suitor to knock on the door to seek her hand in marriage. In the first half of this novel, the worlds of Aqa Jaan and his family members are neatly ordered.
Except, things start changing. Aqa Jaan's nephew Shahbal, with permission, smuggles a television into the house so that Aqa Jaan and the imam can watch the moon landing. The nephew argues that the imam needs to keep in touch with the world, even if those landing on the moon are the Americans, and a television is part of the suspect civilization that the Shah is imposing on his people. In the second half of the novel, the consequences of political unrest in Iran, both before and after the revolution of 1978-79 are being felt. Small changes at first, but then the fall of the Shah and the return of the Ayatollah destroy the established order of the house of the mosque. The world turns upside down: Shahbal backs the Islamic revolution, while Aqa Jaan's other nephew, Nosrat, a westernised film-maker, becomes a member of Khomeini's inner circle. Nothing seems predictable. This is a complex novel, but not difficult to read. Kader Abdolah creates a multi-layered world: filled with interesting characters living, and sometimes losing, their lives in the turmoil of revolutionary change. And Aqa Jaan himself, and the house of the mosque, are not unchanged. What does the future hold? `Our story is over, but the crow still hasn't reached its nest.' Jennifer Cameron-Smith
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A good story,
This review is from: The House of the Mosque (Paperback)
This eerily true to life story is well written. I applaud the author for the depth of his imaginative mind, which is revealing in this story. He drew the reader into the story from the opening chapter all the way to the end.The descriptions are very vivid and gives the reader a sense of the setting that is almost real.Its depiction of religion in the way some people apply it in the every day lives of man is very reveal, bringing to mind a description I read in The Union Muzhik. The author did a great job at characterization. The compelling plot added further credibility to the quality of the story and the pacing made it a page-turner. Coming from reading Triple Agent Double Cross, I have deep respect from authors who take us to unfamiliar settings and implant us to the point that we relate to the story and its characters as if we were there. This is a story that will strike a chord with a broad readership.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A slice of Iranian history,
By
This review is from: The House of the Mosque (Paperback)
The story is set in Senejan, a small town some 160 miles South-West of Teheran, and it begins in 1969, the start of the last decade of the Shah's reign. The house is a sprawling family house in which three branches of the same family are living around the same courtyard. The senior branch is headed by Aqa Jaan, the unquestioned head of the whole family, a respected and respect-worthy carpet merchant and head of the bazaar. The other two branches are headed by the imam and the muezzin respectively. (The three are said to be cousins, but in some places of the text they appear to be brothers. The curious "chart" at the beginning of the book is not a family tree: a proper family tree would have been helpful.) The older generation of the family are (with one exception) traditionally conservative and of course religious, as is the town. As a matter of course they are opposed to the Americans and to the secularizing Shah whom they regard as America's puppet, and they revere the ayatollahs in nearby Qom; but the family is politically inactive until the next generation comes along. A young imam from Qom marries into the family. The demonstrations he organizes in Senejan are a foretaste of the events leading to the overthrow of the Shah and of the eventual ascendancy of the fanatical ayatollahs; but at that time the Shah's police still had the upper hand. The Ayatollah Khomeini is in exile in Iraq and then in France. Cinemas and television penetrate Senejan, once too religious a place for such modernization. But the Shah also has secular enemies: one member of the younger generation joins the underground left-wing opposition to the Shah.
Then, in 1979, the Iranian Revolution takes place - Abdolah gives graphic accounts of it. The left, though secular, initially supported the revolution against the Shah, but they soon become victims of the Ayatollah Khomeini's regime. Aqa Jaan's family, with members in each camp and in none, is torn apart, with murderous results. In his usual spare prose, Abdolah shows the arbitrary and ruthless violence of the new fanatical rulers in all its horror. This becomes even worse after the outbreak of the war with Iraq. On the assumption that his readers are not familiar with this period, he supplies many historical details about it (including, for example, the American hostage crisis - though in this case he places the failed rescue mission in the desert near Senejan when in fact it was between 200 and 300 miles to the South East of it. He also puts an Ayatollah Araki in charge of the mosque which had been taken away from Aqa Jaan's family, though this cannot be the Grand Ayatollah of the same name.) There are several subplots. Particularly charming I found the portrayal, in the first half of the book, of the two "grandmothers", who are in fact not grandmothers at all, but two old ladies who have been called such because they have been much-loved servants in the family since they had been young girls. There is also a chapter on the famous Iranian film called `The Cow', perhaps the first of many that gave an international market to Iranian films. It has always puzzled me that under such a repressive regime, at one time so hostile to the cinema, such superb films could be made. Now it seems that Khomeini himself gave `The Cow' his public blessing. There is a curiously peaceful coda to the book. After Khomeini's death and the end of the war with Iraq, the terrors ended. The ayatollahs were still in oppressive charge, but "there were no more executions and no more assassinations. Everyone was tired. Everyone needed a rest." The people in the mountain village who had once made the carpets for Aqa Jaan, who had refused him all help during the reign of terror, now warmly and apologetically welcomed him back. Some deep family griefs are assuaged. Symbolically, a garden blooms in a harsh landscape, watered by an underground aquifer. The book gives an excellent insight into Iranian society and history. The author clearly has respectful affection for the Islamic religion, but he is also a radical exile from Iran who had been as much opposed to the Shah as he was of dictatorship of the ayatollahs. He now lives in the Netherlands, and wrote the book in Dutch. It has been translated into English by Susan Massotty, in a simple, clear, unadorned and sometimes minimalist style. At the end of the book, Aqa Jaan receives a letter from one member of the family who has emigrated to the Netherlands: "For the last few years I've spent all my time committing my stories to paper ... I write in another language now... Actually writing has been my salvation. It was the only way I could express the suffering and pain that you and our country have undergone..."
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The House of the Mosque,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The House of the Mosque (Paperback)
I often listen to ABC radio, book reviews and this little gem came up.
I was interested to know how the Moslem think, what sort of home life they have and just how different their culture is. This book is a good insight. It is written in the era of the '60's up to and including the time of the Iranian Revolution of 1979. It takes us through this era and the changes that take place from the time of Persia under the Shah to an Islamic Republic under Khomeini by following a family's life. I wanted a greater understanding of the Moslem way of life and this book was able to do that for me.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The house in the mosque,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The House of the Mosque (Kindle Edition)
Just loved this book from start to finish. Wonderful character building. I felt I was living in the house with the family. It gave me a great understanding of the life in Iran and the (tragic)changes brought about in the aftermath of the downfall of the shah. An excellent read.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic,
By Ingrid (Norway) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The House of the Mosque (Paperback)
I read this book three years ago - and it still stands as one of the best books I have ever read.
Highly recommended! |
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House of the Mosque by Kader Abdolah (Paperback - January 21, 2010)
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