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Persepolis: The Story of an Iranian Childhood Hardcover – 22 May 2003

4.5 out of 5 stars 24 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 160 pages
  • Publisher: Jonathan Cape (22 May 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0224064401
  • ISBN-13: 978-0224064408
  • Product Dimensions: 16.1 x 1.6 x 24 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 17,296 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Amazon Review

Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis is an exemplary autobiographical graphic novel, in the tradition of Art Spiegelman's classic Maus. Set in Iran during the Islamic Revolution, it follows the young Satrapi, the six-year-old daughter of two committed and well-to-do Marxists. As she grows up, she witness first-hand the effects that the revolution and the war with Iraq have on her home, family and school.

The main strength of Persepolis is its ability to make the political personal. Told through the eyes of a child (as reflected in Satrapi's simplistic yet expressive black-and-white artwork), the story shows how young Marjane learns about her family history and how it is entwined with the history of Iran, and watches her liberal parents cope with a fundamentalist regime that gets increasingly rigid as it gains more power. Outspoken and intelligent, Marjane chafes at Iran's increasingly conservative interpretation of Islamic law, especially as she grows into a bright and independent teenager. Throughout she remains a hugely likeable young woman.

Persepolis gives the reader a snapshot of daily life in a country struggling with an internal cultural revolution and a bloody war, but within an intensely personal context. It's a very human history, beautifully and sympathetically told. --Robert Burrow

Review

"Telling the story of Satrapi’s childhood in Iran, this is funny, wise and sad." (Stylist)

"This touching, funny, illuminating memoir deserves a much wider audience." (Kate Figes Guardian)

"The magic of Marjane Satrapi's work is that it can condense a whole country's tragedy into one poignant, funny scene after another." (Natasha Walter Independent on Sunday)

"Persepolis is a stylish, clever and moving weapon of mass destruction." (David Jenkins Sunday Telegraph)

"Marjane Satrapi's books are a revelation. They're funny, they're sad, they're hugely readable. Most importantly, they remind you that the media sometimes tell you the facts but rarely tell you the truth. In one afternoon Persepolis will teach you more about Iran, about being an outsider, about being human, than you could learn from a thousand hours of television documentaries and newspaper articles. And you will remember it for a very long time." (Mark Haddon)

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Customer Reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
I really really loved this book, which I bought because of a couple of glowing reviews in newspapers. Its so good, I'd say you're really missing out if you haven't read it. Everyone I buy it for ends up buying it for their friends too. Basically its the story of a very precocious girl living in Tehran with liberal secular parents and how they live through the Islamic Revolution and the Iran-Iraq War, but its not heavy-going despite that. Its full of both funny and poignant moments, and the author is fairly frank about how as a child she would cause her folks loads of stress. The way she works the story between the words and images is wonderful. Buy it! You'll love it. I'm reserving the next volume right now.
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Format: Hardcover
A remarkable child's-eye view of the Islamic Revolution in Iran from the within. Persepolis successfully uses the medium of comics to disarm the reader and draw him in to provide not just a view from inside the revolution, but a personal view from deep within a family inside the revolution. This makes for a surprisingly intimate and immediate experience of events most Westerners have viewed only vaguely from afar.
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Format: Hardcover
This book traces the life of young girl growing up in turbulent times in Iran, beginning with life under the Shah, moving on to the revolution and continuing through the Iran / Iraq war. The girl narrates anecdotes from her own life that provide a thought-provoking window onto the way these events affected ordinary individuals. The choice of a comic strip to portray events of such significance and tragedy has some disadvantages, one being the limits it places on the possibilities of characterization. On the other hand, there are also numerous advantages. The illustrations can at times be quite powerful, the simplicity of the format is used effectively to highlight the stark brutality and poignancy of the events portrayed, and perhaps above all, the graphic novel format makes a story with such important themes accessible to people of all ages.
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Format: Hardcover
Marjane Satrapi was ten-years-old when the Islamic revolution took away her freedom and rights, thrusting Iran back into the Dark Ages. Through simple but elegant illustrations, Satrapi tells the story of her childhood in Tehran during this time in her country's history. She shows the horrors and deprivations caused by the rise of religious extremists, as well as the bitter humour and courage that each ordinary citizen found to survive such a period.

The amazing thing about this graphic novel is how Satrapi can convey and stir emotions through illustrations. The themes she explores are universal - families torn apart, innocents persecuted, evil gaining power - but she makes them all the more powerful by injecting her young self's punk humour into the storytelling and making the reader care for her and her family. There's a sequel, which I can't wait to read, as well as a film, which is being touted as 2008's winner of the Best Foreign Language Oscar.

With Iran so often villified in the media, it's good to be reminded that the people in that country are just like you and I: not necessarily the choosers of their regime; and certainly not deserving of any bombs coming their way.
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Format: Hardcover
An absolutely wonderful telling of Iranian history by means of b/w cartoons. Opening in 1980, when the author, aged 10, is a - not surprisingly outspoken child- of very westernized, Marxist parents, she takes us through the Revolution against the Shah. There are always underlying fears as some of her parents' friends are murdered. But the people's joy at the overthrowing of the Shah soon becomes fear at the rising Islamic republic: as mere boys are drafted into the army, many of her friends emigrate. And she and her liberated mother must toe the line and wear a veil.
Marjane includes little snippets that are significant to a teenager: her parents smuggling pop posters in for her after a trip to Turkey, shopping with friends, her anger at the politically correct lines spouted by her teacher. But also the horrific - the escalating war with Iraq, and the Iranians' refusal to make peace because 'they eventually admitted that the survival of the regime depended on the war'.
The book ends with Marjane being sent to continue her education in Europe.....the story continues in book 2.
I was surprised that a book of this format could be this moving. You really feel you get to know the 'characters' as the author does such a good job of portraying emotion in simple little pictures.
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By Eileen Shaw TOP 1000 REVIEWER on 9 Sept. 2009
Format: Hardcover
This wonderfully informative graphic novel makes the political personal and meaningful, within simple black and white images that reminded me of the work of Art Spiegelman, who took the world by storm with his recreation of the Holocaust as a tale of cats against mice. This graphic novel doesn't have quite that ambition and bite, but it is a brilliant potted history of Iran. Told through the eyes of a child in Satrapi's simplistic yet expressive black-and-white artwork, the story shows how young Marjane learns about her family history and how it is entwined with the history of Iran, and watches her liberal parents cope with a fundamentalist regime that gets increasingly rigid as it gains more power. Outspoken and intelligent, Marjane chafes at Iran's increasingly conservative interpretation of Islamic law, especially as she grows into a bright and independent teenager. Satrapi left Iran when she was twelve years-old when her parents decided she would have better chances of a good education in the West and sent her to live with friends in Austria.

Persepolis gives the reader a poignant if highly stylised picture of a country struggling with an internal cultural revolution and a bloody war with Iraq. It's a very human history, briefly yet sympathetically told.
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