A moving elegy for a lost father and homeland, but also a voice raised against all forms of repression... My Father's Notebook reads like a detective story: information is withheld so that we gradually discover the background to Ishmael's exile. * * Guardian on MY FATHER'S NOTEBOOK * *
With seamlessly interwoven quotations from Persian and Dutch literature, deft storytelling and affectionate humour, he offers the reader buoyancy as well as weight My Father's Notebook is a gift to English readers. * * Independent * *
Abdolah's juxtapositions - the spiritual and the earthly, myth and reality - give the story a powerful irony . . . Abdolah lathers the story with an almost deliberate nostalgia, choosing not to drive recent history into the present day. Instead, he presents just the nascent phases of the revolution and the wide-eyed innocence of those, such as Aqa Jaan, who held such high hopes for all it could have been. -- Arifa Akbar * * Independent * *
Kader Abdollah . . . tells this story straight from the heart. And it's on the heart too that it leaves an indelible mark. -- David Robinson * * Scotsman * *
Beautifully written and fiercely readable. -- Jane Shilling * * Daily Mail * *
Kader Abdollah skillfully guides readers through the key worlds events and their effects on the Aqa Jaan household, in this book that offers unique insight into the Iranian Revolution. Moving without being overly sentimental and entertaining and entertaining while staying true to the facts, this expertly mingles fiction and personal history to create a thought provoking novel. -- Jo Rowles * * Waterstone's Books Quarterly * *
Compelling and moving, the book delivers, in spite of all the tragedy, a sense of hope. * * Skinny * *
Abdolah lathers the story with an almost deliberate nostalgia, choosing not to drive recent history into the present day. Instead he presents just the nascent phases of the revolution and the wide eyed innocence of those, such as Aqa Jann, who held such high hopes for all it could have been. * * Belfast Evening Telegraph * *
Warm, generous and ultimately optimistic. -- Sally Kinnes * * Sunday Herald * *
Richly sensuous. * * Independent * *
Kader Abdolah's fable-like story of a family caught in the turmoil of the Iranian revolution is beguiling and utterly original. It is that rare thing: a deeply political novel that informs, thrills, and moves in equal measure * * Tahmima Anam, author of A GOLDEN AGE * *