Salar Abdoh
Salar Abdoh is an Iranian novelist and essayist. He is the author of the novels The Poet Game (2000), Opium (2004), Tehran At Twilight (2014), Out of Mesopotamia (2020), A Nearby Country Called Love (2023), and the editor and translator of the anthology Tehran Noir (2014). He is also a director of the graduate program in Creative Writing at the City College of New York at the City University of New York.
Early life
[edit]Salar Abdoh was born in Tehran, Iran and also spent some time in England. When Abdoh was fourteen his family was forced to leave Iran for the US. Abdoh earned an undergraduate degree from U.C. Berkeley and received a Master's from the City College of New York.[citation needed]
Career
[edit]Abdoh's first novel, The Poet Game, focuses on a young agent sent by a top-secret Iranian government agency to infiltrate a group of Islamic extremists in New York in order to keep them from acts of terror that might draw the US into a war in the Middle East.[1] Though the book was published in 2000, it received far greater attention following the September 11, 2001 attack on the World Trade Center.[2] His second novel, Opium (2004) tells the story of a young American who used to work as a drug-runner along the Afghan/Iran border during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Years later, living in New York and trying to keep a low profile, his past suddenly catches up with him as the US is gearing up to invade Afghanistan and Iraq. Abdoh's third novel, Tehran At Twilight, a literary thriller reminiscent of Graham Greene's The Quiet American, depicts the limits of friendship, and betrayal, in a time of war and after. Simultaneously with this novel, in 2014 Abdoh also edited and translated Tehran Noir, a collection of noir stories from various Iranian writers about Tehran. By 2020, with the Publication of Out of Mesopotamia, a war novel based on his own experiences in the wars of the Middle East (Iraq & Syria), Abdoh told the story of a journalist who, as the New York Times book review noted, "Torn between war and art ... chooses both."[3]
Abdoh also co-wrote the play Quotations from a Ruined City with his older brother, Reza Abdoh, a world-famous avant-garde theater director. The play was first produced in 1994.[4]
References
[edit]- ^ Harlan, Megan (2001). The New York Times Book Reviews 2000. Taylor & Francis. p. 358. ISBN 1-57958-058-0. Retrieved 2008-06-25.
- ^ Cowart, David (2006). Trailing Clouds: Immigrant Fiction in Contemporary America. Cornell University Press. p. 110. ISBN 0-8014-7287-3. Retrieved 2008-06-25.
- ^ Guttridge, Peter (2004-07-25). "It was hell being a travelling salesman in the Old West". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2008-06-25.
- ^ Schneider, Rebecca; Cody, Gabrielle H. (2001). Re:direction: A Theoretical and Practical Guide. Routledge. p. 178. ISBN 0-415-21390-8. Retrieved 2008-06-25.
External links
[edit]- Official website
- On taking a bullet for another in war
- On the fight against ISIS at Tel Afar
- On homelessness and hunger in America
- On being a female journalist in Tehran
- The Millions' article
- Article on Martyrs and commanders
- Article on cost of war in the Middle East
- Author statement on the writing of Tehran At Twilight
- Salar Abdoh's introduction to the Tehran Noir anthology: The Seismic City
- An Article by Salar Abdoh about a public execution in Tehran
- Salar Abdoh about covering the 'War on Drugs' in Afghanistan
- Fiction by Salar Abdoh about the Iran-Iraq War
- Salar Abdoh on Majed Neisi about the Afghan civil war
- Salar Abdoh on the 2009 demonstrations in Tehran
- Fiction by Salar Abdoh in Tremors-Anthology of Iranian-American Fiction, Asia Society, 2013
- Faber & Faber author page
- Interview
- Excerpt from The Poet Game
- Essay on September 11
- Three-part series of articles on Iran:
- NEA Writer's Corner Writer's Statement