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During a wedding celebration, Jamil, the sole heir of a rich landowner, meets Naji, who sells hay for a living. The novel follows the boys' escape from their village in the hopes of finding a place where they can be together freely. Even as their love evolves, their strong connection remains, which helps see them through the upheavals of the Islamic Revolution and the Iran-Iraq War. In Boys of Love, Ghazi Rabihavi offers both a universal story about the ups and downs of all relationships and a clear-eyed portrait of same-sex desire in Iran, where homosexuality remains punishable by death.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
During a wedding celebration, Jamil, the sole heir of a rich landowner, meets Naji, who sells hay for a living. The novel follows the boys' escape from their village in the hopes of finding a place where they can be together freely. Even as their love evolves, their strong connection remains, which helps see them through the upheavals of the Islamic Revolution and the Iran-Iraq War. In Boys of Love, Ghazi Rabihavi offers both a universal story about the ups and downs of all relationships and a clear-eyed portrait of same-sex desire in Iran, where homosexuality remains punishable by death. Banned in Iran, the novel was initially published in Farsi in the UK, then translated into French and shortlisted for the Prix Médicis étranger. Rabihavi avoids both lasciviousness and exoticism in depicting a deep love between male characters living through the Iranian Cultural Revolution. Ultimately, this story challenges preconceived notions about marginalized communities in the Middle East.
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Autorenporträt
Ghazi Rabihavi is an Iranian playwright and novelist who began his career as a screenwriter. His 1997 play Look Europe! was produced by Harold Pinter, and a short story of his was included in the 2005 PEN Anthology of Contemporary Iranian Literature. Poupeh Missaghi is a writer, editor, and translator (between English and Persian). She is an assistant professor of English and literary arts at the University of Denver and a faculty mentor of the Low-Residency MFA in Creative Writing program at the Pacific Northwest College of Art. She is the author of trans(re)lating house one and Sound Museum. A recent translation is In the Streets of Tehran, a book of witness narrative.