The Complete Persepolis Library Binding Author: Visit Amazon's Marjane Satrapi Page | Language: English | ISBN:
1435276256 | Format: PDF
The Complete Persepolis Library Binding Description
Review
"A memoir of growing up as a girl in revolutionary Iran,
Persepolis provides a unique glimpse into a nearly unknown and unreachable way of life... That Satrapi chose to tell her remarkable story as a gorgeous comic book makes it totally unique and indispensable."
--
Time --This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
About the Author
Marjane Satrapi was born in Rasht, Iran. She now lives in Paris, where she is a regular contributor to magazines and newspapers throughout the world, including
The New Yorker, and
The New York Times. She is the author of
Embroideries, Chicken with Plums, and several children's books. She cowrote and codirected the animated feature film version of
Persepolis. --This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
- Library Binding: 341 pages
- Publisher: Paw Prints 2008-05-09 (May 9, 2008)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 1435276256
- ISBN-13: 978-1435276253
- Product Dimensions: 1.2 x 5.8 x 9 inches
- Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
THE COMPLETE PERSEPOLIS brings together in one softbound volume two graphic novels published earlier in English (translated from French): PERSEPOLIS 1 - THE STORY OF A CHILDHOOD, and PERSEPOLIS 2 - THE STORY OF A RETURN. As a single volume, Ms. Satrapi's work reads as a seamless story of an Iranian woman's maturation from a young girl in the Shah's (and Ayatollah Khomeini's) Iran to her high school years in Austria, back to the Iran attacked by Saddam Hussein and then transformed into a fundamentalist Islamic state, and finally back again to Europe as a young adult. The book's title is borrowed from the name of ancient Persia's ceremonial capital, dating back some 2,500 years, although Persepolis is in fact the Greek translation of the original Persian name, Parsa.
The story is strictly autobiographical, rendered as a memoir of childhood and young adulthood. Satrapi begins her story at age ten, the daughter of well-educated and well-off parents who put a premium on their daughter's religious and academic independence. Marjane's parents prod their pre-adolescent daughter toward a liberal education and encourage her to speak out. However, being a rebel against oppression in Iran leads inevitably to trouble and expulsion from school. Her parents recourse is to pack young Marjane off to Austria, isolated and alone in a foreign and far more secular culture. A series of mostly negative experiences leads her back to her homeland and an unsuccessful marriage during the early years of Iran's fundamentalist revolution with its growing religious oppression. When the young adult Marjane and her parents finally realize that her future lies not in Iran but in Europe, she heads off to France where she still lives today.
Ms.
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