A bold and beautiful work of fiction ... Khadivi's language is sensuous and rich ... At a time when western readers' perceptions of Iran are too often shaped by current affairs, this book and its sequels will shine a necessary light on the country's dawn, and on its people's remarkable history * Financial Times on The Age of Orphans *
The Age of Orphans has something in common with Chinua Achebe's masterpiece, Things Fall Apart ... The style is poetic, intense and lyrical, even when describing events of great brutality * Independent on Sunday *
Remarkable for its beautiful and brutal poetry ... Khadivi's writing is bleakly expressive and always sensitive to the alterity and particularity, the poetry and the politics of an individual life * Independent *
Poetic, heartfelt * The Times on The Age of Orphans *
A bleak, bittersweet paean to Laleh Khadivi's birthplace, Iran. In a work which is as beautiful as it is violent, she tells the larger story of the nation's reinvention through the life of a single Kurdish boy ... Impressive and courageous * Times Literary Supplement on The Age of Orphans *
Assured and endlessly creative * Metro on The Age of Orphans *
Khadivi is capable of lyricism and poetry ... A brave and haunting book about displacement and identity * Independent on The Walking *
Lyrical and illuminating * Independent on The Walking *
The precision of Khadivi's sentences, each with a gentle rhythm and a sure-footed intelligence, engenders deep sympathy for the miseries experienced by forced migrants * New York Times on The Walking *
Laleh Khadivi's powerful family saga concludes with a story about teen radicalisation ... Khadivi uses a palate of muted shades of grey, thus encouraging in her readers the degree of empathy that's so sorely absent in the interactions between Rez and those who can't see beyond the colour of his skin. Each of the novels in the trilogy is a Bildungsroman, but there's something particularly poignant about Rez's journey from innocence to experience given that, compared with the struggles of his father and grandfather, he's born into land of such plenty and privilege. To emphasise this, much of the story is devoted to typical lazy teenage days, filled with activities without consequence, the pleasures and boredoms of which Khadivi is excellent at capturing. One doesn't need to have read either The Age of Orphans or The Walking to appreciate the full impact of A Good Country, the tragedy of Rez's fate rings loud and clear regardless, but I wouldn't be surprised if first-time readers found themselves thereafter drawn to the earlier books. To see history repeating itself ... is to add another layer of complexity to both stories * Lucy Scholes, Independent *
Using vivid characters that bound off the page and dialogue that's millennial and local and deliberate to the last word, Khadivi establishes a sense of familiarity early on in order to prepare the reader for a story that is not at all familiar - it is outlandish and extreme and deeply unsettling. Khadivi's novel poses a mystifying question: how does a lucky, studious American boy, the free child of prosperous Iranian immigrants who never had to suffer, fall into radical Islam? ... What Khadivi offers is a frighteningly believable study of one boy's psychological transformation... No doubt, Khadivi's novel will draw comparisons to Mohsin Hamid's much acclaimed 2007 book, The Reluctant Fundamentalist, which also takes on identity, displacement, assimilation and radicalisation * Dina Nayeri, Scotsman, Summer Reading *