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James Buchan is a descendant of John Buchan author of "The 39 Steps", and a former arts writer for the Financial Times. The book received excellent and extensive professional reviews when released in the UK and deserved every one of them.
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This is not to say _The Persian Bride_ is a thriller, nor do I agree that it is an epic. It is, instead, a romance written without sentimentality. I can't imagine the narrator, as he appears at the chronological beginning of the story, ever engaging the sympathies of any reader. He is set up to be toppled, by love in the person of Shirin. As readers we are as eager to see the collapse of the conceited John Pitt and his subsequent self-renovation as to read of their escape and married life together, and what follows their insulated existence.
The prose, because of the weight of thought behind it (from the characters, not from the author), contains more than what is said, but what is not immediately apparent is expansive. Histories and civilizations, as well as lives, lie under every line, and as Pitt topples so does the iran of the Shah.
Someone has said the dialogue is convincing. While I've not been to any of the countries visited in the narrative, the feelings and the toughmindedness of Shirin remind me of many persian friends. The machinations of those in power, those who used to be, and those who want to be are complex and real. The gradual enlightenment of the narrator rings true.
Gradually the novel becomes diffuse as the narrator's grip on himself (it can be argued he never had more than an occasional grip on events) loosens. One can argue that as this occurs the dramatic aspect of the work decreases. Yet what takes its place is perfectly in keeping with the narrator's growth. His journeys through and travails in the middle east, or cental asia, or west asia, depending on the perspective, mirrors his disintegrating self-centredness while revealing the book to be, in some respects, a quest novel. The end, with which some are dissatisfied, falls into the tradition of Dante seeing Beatrice in Paradiso. Its reality is in question, and probably a few readers would like to know if what is presented is what happens. That is immaterial to the novel, for thematically Buchan writes of a type of grace which many will feel to be truthful, if not in fact than in their bones, blood and soul, and which perfectly closes the book.
_The Persian Bride_ is a rich, emotionally engaging and significant novel, an evocative, spiritual odyssey, for which Buchan must be given high praise.
This is by no means an easy book to read, neither in terms of the writing style, nor in terms of its content. The writing style is beautifully complex and poetic, mysterious. One has to really savor the passages. I wanted to read some of the sections over and over again, just because they are written so beautifully.
In terms of the story, although it is fiction, the context is very real and very conceivable. The trials that John Pitts goes through to become reunited with his wife are not far from the truth of what real people have gone through in that corner of the world. Sections of the story can be very sad, but still the book is a real pleasure to read; a tender love story to remember for a long time, with a refreshing writing style, definitely outside of the ordinary!
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