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What Members Thought

Gaijinmama
This book has sat on my shelf for around three or four years. The title fits a Reading Challenge I'm doing, but more importantly, in the past year or two a few lovely, brilliant, fierce Iranian women have crossed my path and made my world a much more interesting place. They're all very different people, and have made me more aware of the rich history and ethnic/ cultural diversity of Iran.
In short, the timing was right and this book really resonated with me.
I connected with the narrator, too, e
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Jessica
May 19, 2008 rated it liked it
A lovely setting and an unsanitized view of the harsh realities of life in 17th-century Iran. I appreciate that the author didn't take the easy way out with her ending or give the typical view of arranged marriage as an unremitting horror. While the ultimate resolution sees excessively modern, it's otherwise a well-done piece of fiction. ...more
YoSafBridg
May 24, 2008 rated it it was amazing
"First there wasn't and then there was. Before God, no one was."


A much more poetic opening than “Once upon a time…” don’t you think? This is Anita Amirrezvani's rough translation of an Iranian expression that begins each of the traditional Iranian or Islamic stories/folk tales she intersperses throughout her first novel The Blood of Flowers. This beautiful novel is set in seventeenth century Persia (although the narrator often refers to her country as Iran so i suppose it was known by that nam
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Tanya
Mar 11, 2014 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
I picked this book because it was on audio and available now from the library Overdrive system; I had been looking for a book with the keyword "flowers" for a March keyword challenge.

I had not expected to enjoy this story as much as I did. I know part of the reason I liked this is because I enjoy this actor's voice. But it did make the story seem as if it could take place in modern culture too.

I loved the descriptions throughout this book. There are many food descriptions in addition to those o
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Rachel Shields Ebersole
A hard-knock life novel in the unusual (and seemingly quite well-researched) setting of medieval Persia, with a strong, brave female narrator. I hoped and feared for her all the way through the story.
Sunflower
Jul 21, 2008 rated it really liked it
"Rugmaking is an excellent metaphor for life. You work on a loom, one knot at a time, until one day you have an entire carpet with a complex personality and history. Just like a life."
This book is set in Iran, and is the story of how a girl reclaims her life. The relationships she forms along the way, the betrayals she experiences, the descriptions of the plight of women of her time, and of course one of my favourite things (carpets)kept me engrossed.
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Sarah
3.5 stars, really, but I'm feeling generous. ...more
Kristin
Mar 08, 2008 rated it it was amazing
Shelves: iran
Kaley
Aug 01, 2008 marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Martha
Sep 18, 2008 rated it really liked it
Crystal
Oct 28, 2008 marked it as to-read
Christina
Sep 05, 2009 rated it really liked it
Ching-In
Sep 28, 2009 marked it as to-read
Soelo
May 19, 2012 marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Jennifer
Nov 24, 2013 rated it really liked it
Ahsia
Feb 09, 2014 marked it as to-read
Dana
Mar 08, 2014 rated it it was amazing
Neila
Oct 12, 2014 marked it as to-read
Jocelyn
Jan 10, 2016 marked it as to-read
Jackie
Dec 12, 2018 marked it as to-read
Ann
Feb 08, 2019 marked it as to-read
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