A Nearby Country Called Love: A Novel

A Nearby Country Called Love: A Novel

by Salar Abdoh

Narrated by Amin El Gamal

Unabridged — 7 hours, 17 minutes

A Nearby Country Called Love: A Novel

A Nearby Country Called Love: A Novel

by Salar Abdoh

Narrated by Amin El Gamal

Unabridged — 7 hours, 17 minutes

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Overview

A sweeping, propulsive novel about the families we are born into and the families we make for ourselves, in which a man struggles to find his place in an Iran on the brink of combusting

Amid the alleyways of the Zamzam neighborhood of Tehran, a woman lights herself on fire in a desperate act of defiance, setting off a chain reaction of violence and protest. Haunted by the woman's death, Issa is forced to confront the contradictions of his own family history, throughout which his late brother Hashem, a prominent queer artist in Tehran's underground, defied their father, a skilled martial artist bound to traditional notions of honor and masculinity. 

Issa soon finds himself thrown into a circle of people living on the margins of society, negotiating a razor-like code of conduct that rewards loyalty and encourages aggression and intolerance in equal measure. As the city explodes around him, Issa realizes that it is the little acts of kindness that matter most, the everyday humanity of individuals finding love and doing right by one another. 

Vibrant and evocative, intimate and intelligent, A Nearby Country Called Love is both a captivating window into contemporary Iran and a portrait of the parallel fates of a man and his country-a man who acknowledges the sullen and rumbling baggage of history but then chooses to step past its violent inheritance.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

09/11/2023

Abdoh (Out of Mesopotamia) offers a moving and nuanced study of gender and sexuality in contemporary Iran. Issa has reluctantly returned to Tehran from New York City (“sometimes there simply was no story of triumphing elsewhere in the world”). Back home, his longtime friend Nasser wants him to help take revenge on an unnamed widower whose wife set herself on fire after years of abuse. En route to visit the widower, Issa remembers the persecution that Hashem, his late queer brother, faced in their neighborhood. When they finally confront the widower, Issa is struck by the “futile maleness of it all.” The plot, such as it is, follows Issa as he reckons with the various contradictions of religious law and codes of patriarchal honor. One episode involves Mehran, an old friend of Hashem’s who’s now in a relationship with Nasser. When Nasser tells Issa he plans to force Mehran into gender reassignment surgery so their relationship can be legal, Issa is disgusted. Out of this sad, low-key chronicle, Abdoh brings life to Issa’s longing, which is fueled by memories of his brother (“Don’t forget this is the land of One Thousand and One Nights, Issa. Anything is possible,” Hashem once told him). It’s an artful rendering of hope amid despair. Agent: Jessica Papin, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret. (Nov.)

From the Publisher

Shortlisted for the 2024 William Saroyan International Prize for Writing

“A complex portrait of interpersonal relationships in contemporary Iran. . . . A Nearby Country Called Love raises the possibility that love—or more vitally, connection—can still be forged in a difficult world.” —The New York Times

“Brutally poignant.”The Washington Post

“Through his sympathetic antihero, Abdoh gives us a rare, eye-opening look at people who rebel against authority simply by being their authentic selves.” Star Tribune

“Remarkable . . . recounted with a sort of bewilderment and tenderness that suggest the modern world has made unfathomable misfits of us all.” —Foreign Affairs

“Once I glanced at this book I couldn’t stop reading, staying up late to gallop through this harrowing, beautiful, surprising novel in one evening. It is an evocation of characters I came to care about, a portrait of everyday life in contemporary Iran, and a profound depiction of gender roles as prisons, and of who escapes these prisons at what cost.” —Rebecca Solnit, author of Orwell’s Roses

“Salar Abdoh’s novel takes us to Iran, with its furies and contradictions—but more importantly, it takes us to the perilous borderland between men and women. His generous story suggests that those of us who live in these worlds—Iranians, Americans, men, women—might yet find solace and peace and love.” —Jennifer Finney Boylan, author of She’s Not There: A Life in Two Genders and (with Jodi Picoult) Mad Honey

“Abdoh offers a moving and nuanced study of gender and sexuality in contemporary Iran. . . . It’s an artful rendering of hope amid despair.”Publishers Weekly

“A poignant dark, dark dramedy exposing the elusive, performative nature of never quite true love.” —Booklist

“An emotionally complex narrative anchored by a protagonist who’s deeper than he seems.”Kirkus Reviews

“Sad, hilarious, bighearted.”BookPage

“An inquiry into manhood, and the loneliness (and sometimes delusion) that hollows men out. . . . Just as Tehranis defy easy categorization, here too they display their capaciousness, their capriciousness.”Electric Literature

“Salar Abdoh’s brutal and beautiful A Nearby Country Called Love recalls the ancient struggles between love and strife, duty and desire, destiny and will, passed down by Persian storytellers of old. The novel’s setting is a modern Iran in the grip of the Islamic State, but its landscape is the human heart, which—regardless of country or faith—wants what it wants. This drama, this play, really, is a tragedy of loves placed in a crucible of unrequited love, each emerging unexpectedly new, if not entirely whole again. Salar Abdoh knows well the perceived abyss that exists between the lands of East and West, one as wide as the distance between strangers and brothers, hatred and tenderness. And yet, from that place, he has given us a modern classic.” —Andrew Krivak, author of Like the Appearance of Horses and The Bear

“Reading this book was almost like encountering a magic trick, but without any of the sleight of hand of a stage show. Instead of lights and shimmering capes, Salar Abdoh uses nuance, care, and remarkably vivid language to make this story billow from something at first seemingly small—a story about two Iranian friends navigating their complicated masculinity and facing their impacted anger—into an ever-expanding, wildly hopeful tale of love in the wake of trauma. Abdoh is at once honest and encouraging in this portrait of contemporary relationships, conjuring a story that shows us how to build chosen families and honor blood ties despite and through the violence of modern life.” —Emily Nemens, author of The Cactus League

“With boldness and wit, Salar Abdoh pierces the veneer of machismo and religiosity in the Islamic Republic to reveal the raw despair of individuals leading double lives and disavowing their bodies and desires to suit the absurd dictates of the state. A powerful novel that explores how language, poetry, and love—in all their imperfect manifestations—can crack a nation’s inheritance of perpetual violence.” —Dalia Sofer, author of Man of My Time

“With a singular brilliance, wit, and lyricism, Salar Abdoh takes us into his confidence to illustrate that our lives are not repeated patterns of commonplace existence, but rather overflowing with unexplored rooms in our wayward, lovesick hearts. This is a classic work of a serious, firmly disciplined writer whose hero's are love and compassion.” —Ernesto Quiñonez, author of Bodega Dreams

“Astonishing and intense, A Nearby Country Called Love is a story of two brothers on opposite sides of the sexual identity divide, their destinies played out in an intergenerational tragedy of moral and cultural errors only possible in contemporary Iran. No novelist writing in English has better captured the weirdness, lies, and occasional transcendence of the Islamic Republic than Salar Abdoh, or delivered a tale turning on the unintended consequences of fatwa-approved sex-change operations leading to the range of trans characters tenderly observed here. My high praise: Abdoh’s novel is as good and poetic as the best indie neorealist films coming out of Iran.” —Brad Gooch, author of Rumi’s Secret: The Life of the Sufi Poet of Love

“Salar Abdoh writes masterfully against toxic masculinity in this intimate novel. I fell in love with his characters as they seek to cultivate tenderness in a culture of violence, and you will too.” —Emily Raboteau, author of Searching for Zion

“Salar Abdoh has traveled to the limits of the expressible in the Middle East. In treating the violence and injustice done to so many, he also elegantly fuses the classics of Arabic and Persian literature in order to write a meditation on love that is at once intensely of our time yet utterly transcendental.” —Nouri Al-Jarrah, author of A Boat to Lesbos

MAY 2024 - AudioFile

Amin El Gamal is a talented narrator who brings out the drama and grit of the alleyways of modern Tehran. He becomes the voice of Issa, a salesman who is increasingly drawn into the lives of those living on the margins in his downtrodden neighborhood. Fans of international literature will sink into this story of how oppression seen cannot be unseen--especially by this reluctant antihero. El Gamal has a lovely rich baritone that makes Issa more sympathetic and his pain more immediate. The listener hangs on every word as Issa uncovers social taboos--such as his late brother's forbidden queer lifestyle. Listeners will become engrossed in the complex world this skilled narrator unfolds. M.R. © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2023-08-26
A Tehran resident navigates his friends’ personal entanglements—and his own.

“Tehran is like a bad marriage one gets trapped in.” Those words, spoken to Issa, the protagonist of Abdoh’s novel, encapsulate the challenges facing many of this book’s characters. For his part, Issa is haunted by memories of his father and brother, both dead. His father was a martial arts instructor; his brother, Hashem, a queer playwright whose sexuality put him at odds with their father. This fraught family background isn’t all that Issa must contend with. When he returned to Tehran after attending graduate school in New York, he lost a teaching job over an accusation of “godlessness.” Much of the novel focuses on his complicated friendship with a firefighter named Nasser. As Abdoh writes, “a guy like Nasser cultivated the notion that protecting the weak was not a fairy tale, but rather an occupation, a religion.” That friendship is tested when Nasser meets Mehran, a colleague of Issa’s late brother. Nasser’s growing attraction to Mehran eventually curdles into something bleaker, leaving Issa increasingly frustrated by his friend’s abusive side. Nasser and Mehran aren’t the only people whose presence causes Issa to rethink his assumptions about society; old friends from his childhood and his time in New York also re-enter his life to further complicate matters. As Mehran tells Issa, “The people you thought were your friends, they can turn on you in a moment.” Issa struggles to find the right thing to do in a series of ethical challenges, even as he tries to navigate his own ambitions and desires.

An emotionally complex narrative anchored by a protagonist who’s deeper than he seems.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940178286418
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 11/07/2023
Edition description: Unabridged
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