This book is not only Fathi's personal story,, but a history of modern Iran as well. I learned so much. I realized how much the Iranian revolution was similar to other, non-religious revolutions, such as the Russian revolution. The poor backed it. Many upper-class people were killed. Many lost their jobs, and those were given to the poor supporters of the revolution, who ultimately became middle class. And the revolution devoured its own.
It is so important to see how Iranians feel as individuals. The effects of the revolution are personalized when one reads about an eleven-year-old girl no longer being able to swim in her apartment complex's swimming pool. But, early rebellious, Fathi swam in it once at night, when no one could see, though she knew she could never do it again.
Her account of the terror of being bombed when Iraq attacked Iran is vivid, and she reminds us that the U.S. backed Saddam Hussein throughout that long war. The war took the lives of so many of Iran's young men.
She tells how Iranians became disillusioned with the revolution. She hopes that the rise of the middle class will eventually mean the end of theocracy.
Fathi was the New York Times reporter in Tehran for many years. The regime did not trust the foreign press, or any free press. Ultimately, she and her family had to flee to Canada, or she would have been arrested.
If you want to learn more about Iran, do read this book.