Marjan Kamali

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Marjan Kamali

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November 2012


Marjan Kamali is the New York Times bestselling author of The Lion Women of Tehran (Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster), The Stationery Shop (Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster), and Together Tea (EccoBooks/HarperCollins). Kamali’s novels are published in translation in more than 30 languages. he is a 2022 recipient of the National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship. Marjan's essays have appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Literary Hub, and the Los Angeles Review of Books. Kamali holds a bachelor’s degree in English literature from University of California, Berkeley, an MBA from Columbia University, and a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing from New York University. Born in Turkey to Iranian parents, Kamali spent her childhood ...more

Goodreads Giveaway

Hello everyone!

My new novel, The Lion Women of Tehran, comes out in July 2024. There is currently a giveaway underway! Here's how you can enter:

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
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Published on December 28, 2023 16:16
Average rating: 4.36 · 290,346 ratings · 33,920 reviews · 8 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Lion Women of Tehran

4.48 avg rating — 159,993 ratings — published 2024
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The Stationery Shop

4.23 avg rating — 121,791 ratings — published 2019 — 5 editions
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Together Tea

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 8,544 ratings — published 2013 — 2 editions
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جلسة شاي في أصفهان

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3.82 avg rating — 11 ratings
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Marjan Kamali 2 Books Colle...

4.11 avg rating — 9 ratings
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The Ecco Summer 2013 Fictio...

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4.50 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2013
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La joven de Teherán

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Die Löwinnen von Teheran

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More books by Marjan Kamali…

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Quotes by Marjan Kamali  (?)
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“The past was always there, lurking in the corners, winking at you when you thought you'd moved on, hanging on to your organs from the inside.”
Marjan Kamali , The Stationery Shop

“She would not have understood, then, that time is not linear but circular. There is no past, present, future. Roya was the woman she was today and the seventeen-year-old girl in the Stationery Shop, always. She and Bahman were one, and she and Walter were united. Kyle was her soul and Marigold would never die.”
Marjan Kamali, The Stationery Shop

“Lovers don’t finally meet somewhere. They’re in each other all along.”
Marjan Kamali, The Stationery Shop

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“Cats?” Baba looked up from practicing chopping tomatoes, looking as if he might explode. “Kittens? ‘Persian’ should remind people of the empire that stretched from one side of the East to the other. The empire that set a new global standard, contributed mountainfuls to astronomy, science, mathematics, and literature, and had a leader, Cyrus the Great, who had the gumption to free the Jewish people and declare human rights! That empire! You can’t be shortsighted when you look at history. History is long!” Baba was shouting now. He continued to slice tomatoes. “Cats! What have we been reduced to?”
Marjan Kamali, Together Tea

“She knew how to swing her legs on that hyphen that defined and denied who she was: Iranian-American. Neither the first word nor the second really belonged to her. Her place was on the hyphen and on the hyphen she would stay, carrying memories of the one place from which she had come and the other place in which she must succeed. The hyphen was hers-- a space small, and potentially precarious. On the hyphen she would sit, and on the hyphen she would stand, and soon, like a seasoned acrobat, she would balance there perfectly, never falling, never choosing either side over the other, content with walking that thin line.”
Marjan Kamali, Together Tea

“Is he kind?” Darya asked. “Because, Mina, there’s a lot to be said for education. And a profession. And family history. And, well, looks. But if there’s one thing that matters, it’s character. That’s the only thing that lasts. Degrees can lose significance, jobs can be lost, a family’s past really shouldn’t define a person, and as for looks . . .” Darya sighed. “Well, looks fade for the best of us. But character, Mina, is what lasts. Kindness will carry you through the ups and downs of life.”
Marjan Kamali , Together Tea

“The past was always there, lurking in the corners, winking at you when you thought you'd moved on, hanging on to your organs from the inside.”
Marjan Kamali , The Stationery Shop

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Margery Marjan,
I am so happy that Together Tea is now available. I am reading just a bit at a time, so I can make it last! I treasure each hour with Darya and Mina. You share stories in their lives that create questions that seem unanswerable, and then show the character in later situations that help them have a broader understanding of their worlds and augment those earlier stories. My second favorite aspect of the book is how you weave in events from pop culture and modern history--events that I remember vividly. So glad you finally let it go. Cheers.


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