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Persian Mirrors: The Elusive Face of Iran

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The book that revealed Iran to the West, now with a new Afterword. Elaine Sciolino updates Persian Mirrors to include coverage of the 2005 presidential election in Iran.
As a correspondent for Newsweek and The New York Times, Sciolino has had more experience covering revolutionary Iran than any other American reporter. She was aboard the airplane that took Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to Tehran in 1979 and was there for the revolution, the hostage crisis, the Iran-Iraq war, the rise of President Khatami, the riots of 1999, and the crisis over Iran's nuclear program. In Persian Mirrors, Sciolino takes us into the public and private spaces of Iran, uncovering an alluring and seductive nation where a great battle is raging -- not for control over territory, but for the soul of its people.

432 pages, Paperback

First published October 3, 2000

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About the author

Elaine Sciolino

7 books251 followers
Elaine Sciolino is a writer and former Paris Bureau Chief for The New York Times, based in France since 2002.

Her new book, Adventures in the Louvre: How to Fall in Love with the World's Greatest Museum, will be published by W.W. Norton & Company on April 1, 2025.

Sciolino's previous book, The Seine: The River That Made Paris, will be published by W.W. Norton & Company on November 5, 2019.

Lauren Collins, Paris staff writer for The New Yorker, calls the book “a soulful, transformative voyage along the body of water that defines the City of Light. Elaine Sciolino is the perfect guide to the world's most romantic river.”

Her book, The Only Street in Paris: Life on the Rue des Martyrs, published by W.W. Norton & Company in 2015, was a New York Times best seller. The Wall Street Journal called the book “a sublime stroll…elegiac;” The New York Times wrote that “she has Paris at her feet;” the Chicago Tribune called her “a storyteller at heart.”
Her second book on life in France, The Only Street in Paris: Life on the Rue des Martyrs, released in November 2015, is a New York Times bestseller and in its fourth printing. The New York Times wrote that “Sciolino … has Paris at her feet.” The Wall Street Journal praised it as “a sublime stroll…elegiac.” The Washington Post called the book a “love letter with such ingenuous passion it’s hard not to cheer up;” it was also chosen as a Washington Post Book Club selection.

In 2010, she was decorated a chevalier of the Legion of Honor, the highest honor of the French state, for her “special contribution” to the friendship between France and the United States.

In 2019, Sciolino became a member of the Advisory Board of Reporters Without Borders, the Paris-based international advocacy organization promoting freedom of information and freedom
of the press. In 2018, she received an honorary Doctor of Literature degree from the University of London.

Sciolino's book, La Seduction: How the French Play the Game of Life, was published by Henry Holt/Times Books in 2011. The book was named one of the best books of 2011 by The New York Times T Magazine. La séduction, comment les Français jouent au jeu de la vie, the French edition, was published by Presses de la Cité in 2012.

Her book, Persian Mirrors: The Elusive Face of Iran, was first published by The Free Press in 2000 and updated in a new edition in 2005. During the Persian Mirrors project, she was a Senior Fellow at the United States Institute of Peace, a Public Policy Scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and the winner of a writing fellowship from the Open Society Institute.

Persian Mirrors was awarded the 2001 New York Public Library Helen Bernstein Book Award for Excellence in Journalism and the Overseas Press Club Cornelius Ryan Citation for nonfiction. It was also a History Book Club selection and a New York Times Notable Book for 2000. In 2001, Sciolino was honored by Columbia University’s Encyclopedia Iranica project “for presenting the best of Iran to the world” and elected to the Executive Council of the Society for Iranian Studies that year.

Sciolino began her journalism career as a researcher at Newsweek Magazine in New York, later becoming national correspondent in Chicago, foreign correspondent in Paris, bureau chief in Rome and roving international correspondent. Sciolino was the Edward R. Murrow Press Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in 1982-1983, the first woman to receive that honor.

She joined The New York Times in 1984, where she has held a number of posts, including United Nations’ bureau chief, Central Intelligence Agency correspondent, Culture correspondent and chief diplomatic correspondent – the first woman to hold that post – and Paris Bureau Chief. She has also served as The New York Time

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5 stars
175 (26%)
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268 (40%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 66 reviews
Profile Image for Margitte.
1,188 reviews667 followers
April 28, 2018
The blurb says it the best. Iran is one of the countries I would love to visit one day. A beautiful, multi-cultural, architectural gem where intellectual debate started thousands of years ago, civilization never stopped its constant renaissance, while preserving the ancient and the unique, and where nature has a mystic quality to its diversity. Contrary to popular believe, Iran is an ancient old wine-making country, an art form which never bowed completely to the new theocracy of recent decades. The spirit and vitality of its people never seized to feed the imagination of visitors to this vast and inviting space. Iran is technically and geographically not a middle-eastern country. The original religion prior to Islam is still practiced.

The author uses the journalese style to invite the reader into this wonder world while addressing the political changes, the cultural norms and values and introduce a much different Iran to the outside world than is commonly known. I have read several books about this old land, and this is not one of the most exciting ones, however, it is so in-depth and informative that I tried to stick to it for most of it. Unfortunately it became a tedious read, since it's style makes it difficult to portray in text what a film documentary could have done better. A visual representation will work better in my humble opinion.

The author is a good writer, but the constant neurotic nature of her approach got me down. Some uplifting stories, but most of it is just depressing. She was on the same airplane as the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1979 when he returned to Iran from France, covered the Iran-Iraq crises, the revolution, hostage crisis, the 1999 riots, and in a new afterward added the elections of 2005.

So, although the book is already a bit dated, it does provide an informative read, particularly focusing on women's issues in many instances. Azam Taleghani was one of the outstanding women who ran for president just to create a stir and a debate all over the country for women's rights. Iran has very much a gender fault line it its current and complex theocratic setup.
Given the harsh treatment of women in much of the Islamic world, it is understandable that Iran’s clerics would seek to rehabilitate their country’s image around the world by celebrating the centrality of their women. Women make up 25 percent of Iran’s labor force and half of the university population. They drive their own cars, buy and sell their own property, and run their own businesses. They keep their own names at marriage. The roots of these rights date from the constitutional movement of the early twentieth century, when women began to demand more rights, and later from the rule of Reza Shah, who expanded education and employment opportunities for women.

Most important, women vote in elections and hold political office. In 1999, when Iran held the first town council elections since the revolution, some Iranians told me that they voted for certain candidates simply because they were women.

...Unlike many other Islamic countries, Iran has an active family planning program, and birth control is widely available. Women are out on the streets early and late; they catch buses and communal taxis to school and work at 6:00 a.m.” and they shop for food at 3:00 a.m. in twenty four-hour supermarkets. In countries like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, most of these rights are denied to women.
So I will go for four stars on this one. It is, however, worth the read. I enjoyed the few days I tried to get through it. But I need to move on. Too many books waiting.
Profile Image for Assal.
7 reviews
March 23, 2009
Being Iranian myself, I usually steer clear of books about Iran written by media personalities and the like, but Ms. Sciolino's take on Iran was a breathe of fresh air. Most writers focus on the government and take the people and their chants of "Death to America" at face value. Ms. Sciolino chose to dig deeper and really see what Iranian society is made up of (the past and present)....and her openness and desire to find the real Iran in the myriad of elusive mirrors really shines through in her writing. This was an excellent foray into trying to understand my complicated country. Bravo, Elaine.
Profile Image for Brian Griffith.
Author 7 books334 followers
July 17, 2022
Covering Iran for New York Times since 1979, Sciolino is full of stories and rich in Iranian friends. She is sometimes enchanted, other times horrified, but generally just fascinated by all the action. She finds Iran a deeply divided, rapidly changing country. In public debate or private conversation with women, she finds strong people who are trying to re-negotiate everything. Here's my favorite tidbit:

"Even the most minor changes in law are difficult to attain. For several days in 1996, I watched a rancorous debate in Parliament about whether the wife's mehriyeh [or bride wealth, which a wife brings to her new family but can reclaim in case of divorce] should be adjusted for inflation. Those deputies who opposed the move argued that it would set an inflationary precedent for all debts and thus create widespread economic instability. At one point, Abbas Abbassi, a conservative male member of Parliament, said: 'A woman who gets married at a young age is highly valuable to her husband. And as she becomes older, her value depreciates. So it is not right to adjust upward for inflation because she is worth less.' ... The female members of Parliament were outraged. 'He believes that women are created to be used by men, that they are just second-hand goods that should be at men's service,' Soheyla Jelowdarzadeh, who is also an engineer, shot back. 'This is against the Koran!' Eventually the female deputies prevailed and the measure passed by a comfortable majority. They considered it a major victory." (p. 126)
Profile Image for Mike.
1,235 reviews176 followers
February 28, 2012
I am glad to be done with Persian Mirrors: The Elusive Face of Iran and will put it on the 3 Star shelf. Stories of the Middle East are often sad and depressing. I hoped it would be different here, with the magnificent history of Persia lending an exotic flavor to this travel and adventure tale. Unfortunately, that is not the case:

The sadness of young people shows up in other ways. A young Iranian-American friend of mine who grew up in the United States but returned to Iran for a visit prided himself on his ability to blend in with people his age who had grown up in the country. But one day in a barbershop, the barber stated, “You recently came from abroad.”
“How could you tell?” the young man asked.
“You have laughter in your eyes,“ the barber said. “No one at your age who has known nothing else but life in Iran has laughter in his eyes.”


There was entirely too much focus on the political maneuvering of the 90’s, when the book was first published. I was tempted to put the book down several times yet would find reasons to continue, like the story of Hamid, an Iran-Iraq war veteran that was reminiscent of the Vietnam era, a forgotten soldier, living at the margins, railing at society and politicians for not honoring the war veterans and casualties.

I wanted to hear more about the Iran-Iraq war but also about the Iranian people and their life. This NYT reporter was on the plane with Khomeini when he went back to Iran. She has traveled many times to the country and has some good insight and anecdotes. I think women might like this book more than I did, because she does focus some large portions on the progress and regression of women in the Islamic Republic. The stories are alternatively uplifting and hopeful and then depressing.

In Qom, shortly after the revolution, I saw a scene that chilled me: three women in black chadors, their faces hidden behind gauzy black cloth. They could see out, imperfectly, I guessed, but outsiders couldn’t see in. “Death out for a walk,” was the way the nineteenth century French writer Guy de Maupassant once described women in chadors. He could have been in Qom that day with me.

The young people are a major force to be reckoned with, after the baby boom following the revolution. The mullahs wanted population growth and they got it. This resulted in a large group of young people who were becoming disillusioned in the late 90’s as they couldn’t get jobs. I think there remains opportunity to connect with the younger generation that has no love for the religious clerics who rule or fond memory of the revolution. There is a irreverence that comes through in the book that is catchy:

…a close friend who is a political scientist at the University of Tehran said only half jokingly that he was going to send me a video of himself.
“A video?”
“I thought I’d do a video of myself saying that if I confess I have cheated on my wife and committed treason, don’t believe it.” He said. “It’s forced. I thought I’d send it to a few of my friends.”
Then he had a better idea. “Maybe I’ll make two—one for my friends and one for my jailers. The one for my jailers will confess to everything. That way, they won’t have to bother torturing me first. They can just put the confession on television and set me free!”


With the ongoing tension recently between the West and Iran, I wanted to get a feeling for the Iranian side. With the outdated political discussions here, even with the 2005 afterword addition, I didn’t get enough of what I wanted. Interesting comment on the Iranian vs American view.

Americans, it is often said, have too little sense of history and the people of the Middle East too much. Where people in the Middle East carry around every past misfortune as a burden to be redeemed or avenged, Americans are constantly shucking off the past in favor of the present.

I'd agree with that. This is a good but dated look at Iran that is not hard to read.
Profile Image for Natalia.
69 reviews
January 1, 2025
I have so many thoughts about this book. Persian Mirrors was published in 2000, before 9/11, and certainly before the 2022 protests after Mahsa Amini's murder. That is all to say, in some ways, this book is very dated, seeing as Iran (and the greater Middle East) has evolved so much over the past 20-25 years. Sciolino wrote this book at a significant political time in Iran's government, where reformist politicians had a lot of power. It seemed to be a very hopeful time... which is sad, knowing just how oppressive their government has become in the present-day. Regardless, this book was well-researched and full of great insight about Iran, particularly, post-revolutionary Iran.

I am always wary of books, articles, etc. about Iran that have been produced by Western authors. There is a lot of cultural and historical nuance that they often do not understand, or acknowledge, which can lead to one-dimensional reporting about the country. This can be frustrating, especially in an age where everybody has an opinion about Iran (and yet, cannot pronounce the name of the country properly). Sciolino has her fair share of Western bias in this book, which was especially clear to me during her (frequent) discussions of why more Iranians don't leave the country. Iran is a collectivist nation; Iranians' identities are inextricably tied to their homeland. To leave is to abandon who they are. Sciolino, and more broadly, the West, struggles with this notion. Otherwise, though, her writing about Iran did not feel too biased one way or the other, which I appreciated. Hooray!

The discussion of Iranian Jews in this book was really eye-opening. Iran is a theocracy, and since the Islamic Revolution, religious minority populations in the country have decreased exponentially. Still, Iran is home to the greatest number of Jews in the Middle East outside of Israel. I have long-wondered why my family is SO Zionist, even now. A someone who is unwaveringly anti-Israel, the chapter about religious minorities in Iran helped contextualize why my Iranian Jewish family continues to defend Israel. There is no separating Zionism from Judaism for them, they are one and the same. Any attack on Israel is an attack on the proliferation of Judaism in the Middle East (which is threatening for Iranian Jews, who are already persecuted because of their religion in Iran). An interesting notion... if misguided. Anyway.

Further, for as easy it is for Americans and Iranians alike to see one another as the enemy, these two counties are remarkably similar to one another... like problematic twin sisters. Particularly with the rise of Christian nationalism in the United States, secularism faces mortal peril. When US politicians criticize Iran, they don't realize that they're looking in a mirror.

Ultimately, Sciolino paints a multi-faceted, complex, sometimes confounding and ever-evolving picture of Iran, and for that I am grateful. I recommend!

"Finally, I have learned that the Iranian revolution still hasn't run its course. It took some scholars of the French Revolution two centuries to finally declare that revolution dead. Many of the battles fought in the Islamic Republic today are the unfinished battles begun during the revolution's early days."
Profile Image for Brani Spolsky.
203 reviews6 followers
February 15, 2024
Co za wspaniałe dzieło. Bardzo wnikliwe i ciekawe. Szkoda, że u nas brakuje tak szerokiego kontekstu w mediach, jeżeli w ogóle cokolwiek o Iranie się pojawia. Warsztat dziennikarski i słownictwo, że szczęka opada. Sprawdziłem na mailu, książkę kupiłem w 2011 roku:) Musiała dojrzeć.
Profile Image for Elizabeth Theiss Smith.
341 reviews85 followers
March 24, 2013
A friend traveled to Iran to give a philosophy paper and recommended this book. Sciolino is a journalist whose curiosity and acute observations make this a fascinating book and a nice introduction to Persian society, especially the society of women.
Profile Image for Cecily Robertson.
361 reviews7 followers
February 18, 2010
I hated History in high school. I just assumed I always would, but now I can see what I hated about it. American History was boring--Americans have learned about it all their lives. Government was boring--it was about the American Government. World History was boring because it was told from the American perspective. I read this for my Global Awareness class and found it interesting, fascinating at some parts. As an American I have almost no knowledge of Middle Eastern countries and this book easily lets you see into the private and public lives of Iranians. It gives great historical context and also a great insight into the people of Iran, since Sciolino herself spent nearly twenty years writing about (and visiting) Iran. I particularly enjoyed the chapters about Iranian women. They were surprising and very intimate. A good, informative read.
Profile Image for Julie.
Author 6 books2,302 followers
August 3, 2008
Elaine Sciolino is a long-time international correspondent for the NY Times and Newsweek. The book is an in-depth, first-hand look at Iran since the revolution- Elaine was on the jet that returned Khomeini to Iran to overthrow the Shah- she knew NOTHING about Persian culture/history/politics when she started that assignment 20 years ago, but is now considered an expert on the region. The book really opened my eyes and piqued my curiosity about this amazing country and its people. She spends a lot of time discussing women and their complex, important role in Iranian society- debunking a myth that they are a silent and oppressed majority.
Profile Image for David Harris.
397 reviews8 followers
November 30, 2015
I studied Farsi in college but have never had an opportunity to visit Iran. I was looking for a book which would give me a sense of what it's like there. This book, which is perhaps a little dated now (although I wouldn't let that stop you from reading it), contains a wealth of information about politics, daily life and religion in Iran. It goes into great detail about political personalities and the struggle between conservatives and reformists. There are also all sorts of great details about what it's like to navigate the country from the immigration desk at the airport to public domains such as hotels, restaurants, taxi cabs and walking on the street as well as private domains such as family homes and gardens.

The author clearly has a lot of affection and respect for Iranian culture, but she pulls no punches when it comes to criticizing the repressive government. It's bad enough that women routinely have to deal with thugs approaching them on the street to instruct them to adjust their scarves to better cover their hair. But the consequences of pushing the boundaries on dress and behavior can sometimes have much more drastic consequences given that there is no real rule of law and that the rules change arbitrarily all the time.

Sciolino wrote this book with 20 years' experience as a journalist covering Iran, so she brought to it the benefit of personal relationships with people in key positions of power in Iran and those close to them. It's fascinating to read about the rise of the reformists in the elections of 1997 and 2000 and their jostling for influence with the conservatives who were and remain determined to maintain a stranglehold on power in the country.

I enjoyed learning more about such colorful characters as former Tehran mayor Gholem-Hosein Karbaschi. He's a guy who knows how to get things done, but there's no doubt he was guilty of at least some of the corruption he was charged with when the conservatives brought him to trial to undermine the reformist agenda. I'm not sure that necessarily makes him a bad guy, though, given that it takes all sorts of creative strategizing to accomplish anything of consequence in that political environment.

Rafsanjani, too, is a multi-dimensional character who can't easily be categorized as either a good guy or a bad guy. But, certainly, Khatami and others of the reformist bent can be placed firmly in the good list in that they have taken on all sorts of personal risks, including prison time, in order to rescue the country from presumably well-meaning individuals who believe that imposing their religion on everyone, no matter what their beliefs are, is the best way to protect the country from outside influences. Others are Abdollah Nouri, a former Khatami cabinet member, Ayatollah Montazeri and both his father and son, and even the Supreme Leader's own brother, Hadi. On the bad-guy list belong those who are determined to do what ever is necessary to protect the status quo no matter who gets hurt or killed as a result.

Other interesting details include the story of Ayatollah Montazeri, chosen early on by Khomeini as his successor, and his subsequent fall from grace due to his public criticisms of repressive practices by the government. Interestingly, he was not jailed for his views as many others have been. Instead, he was allowed to continue to live in his house and to teach students studying to be clerics. Indeed, Shi'ite Islam is all about encouraging a diversity of opinions and allowing everyone to follow the cleric whose opinions most resonate with their own. So it's odd to think that a government led by Shi'ite clerics would be so determined to quash competing points of view by jailing clerics and other members of society the way the Islamic Republic does.

There are many stories about mainstream Iranians and the problems they face in their daily lives. And there are others which describe problems faced by women and minorities in particular. Baha'is in particular face severe challenges because their religion is considered invalid in that it was established after Mohammed, who is believed to have been the seal of the prophets whom no others can follow. Baha'is are required to serve in the army and to pay taxes, but they have no rights and can have their passports or property seized for virtually any reason. But it's bad enough for Jews, who are routinely rounded up and put on trial for spying for Israel or other absurd charges, and Christians, whose schools and churches are, by law, overseen by Muslims though they do not benefit from the large bonyads (foundations) which fund mosques.

I regret that this review is coming across as so negative because there are actually many positive aspects of Iran discussed in the book. The centuries-long tradition of Persian poetry, for example, and beautiful architectural landmarks in places like Shiraz and Esfahan. Cultural events like the Persian New Year, inspired by the Zoroastrian religion native to Iran, are likewise described in detail along with many examples of the constructive ways Iranians go about creating a meaningful life for themselves despite the repressive environment they face.

And, of course, Iran and Islam don't have a monopoly on religious-inspired repression. There was, for example, a story in the book about a female student who was not allowed to take a test at her college because her coat was too short, a story which reminded me of a similar incident which happened at BYU in my hometown of Provo, Utah. That latter incident became famous when the student wrote a letter to the editor of the student newspaper describing the encounter, which resulted from the fact that she was wearing jeans, which weren't allowed at BYU at that time. The solution, she wrote, was to remove her jeans underneath her winter coat in order to gain access into the testing center to take her test. That letter is occasionally republished in the student newspaper along with other memorable letters from across the decades.

In any case, it's clear that Iran will have to change to accommodate the younger generation, who sees no point in social restrictions which have no real benefit to them. And, already in 2000, Sciolino notes that positive change is apparent.

Undoubtedly, the US has undermined Iran over the years. But, in many cases, Iran has brought this on herself. Toward the end of the book, the author points out that our two countries have many goals in common, and she predicts that this will bring us together eventually. Indeed, the democratic tendencies of the Islamic Republic, despite conservative attempts to undermine it, could serve as a model for the rest of the Middle East once they work out more of the kinks. (And God knows that America has enough problems with its own democracy which, likewise, needs major reforms 15 years into the 21st century!)

Finally, I wanted to mention briefly that I read this book side-by-side with Jamie Maslin's _Iranian Rappers and Persian Porn_ and Roger Housden's _Saved By Beauty_. The three books together gave me a combined sense of Iran that I wouldn't have gotten by reading only one or two of them. Housden's is a little more esoteric, focusing on Persian art and philosophy. And Maslin's book was a fun travelogue and a quick read if a little heavy on the details of his partying with mindless hedonists. If you have limited time to devote to reading, I'd go with this book over either of the other two. However, if you're really more interested in a travelogue then an in-depth book about Iranian society, one of those other two books is probably more what you are looking for.

update: Hooman Majd's _The Ayatollah Begs to Differ: The Paradox of Modern Iran_ is an excellent companian volume to this one. If you're not all that interested in a deep look at Iranian society, go with the Maslin travelogue. Otherwise, Majd and Sciolino are the best books I know of on this subject. I am less enamored of Roger Housden's _Saved By Beauty_, mostly because it's very slow and easy to put down. But I'll revisit this review once I've actually finished that book as I want to give it a sporting chance.
Profile Image for Denise.
7,492 reviews136 followers
January 25, 2019
An excellent, insightful and well-rounded portrait of Iran in the last two decades of the 20th century. The author's deep familiarity with the country and its people, gained over the course of twenty years, shines through in every chapter.
Profile Image for Maddie.
247 reviews15 followers
December 26, 2023
I thought this was fantastic! So informative and easy to read. Fascinating stuff.
Profile Image for WIlliam Gerrard.
216 reviews10 followers
February 10, 2017
Elaine Sciolino is a female New York Times journalist who had the good fortune of being present in Paris with the exiled future leader of Iran, Ayatollah Khomenei. When he seized power from the Shah in the Islamic Revolution of 1979, Sciolino was one of the first Western journalists on the ground and she enjoyed privileged access to the new Iranian clerical elite. Iran is a country so alien to us in the West and the lack of knowledge of this ancient culture that is expressed to us in our news and history books made me drawn to reading this book. It is very well written, with lots of detail and the best part for me was the personalised touch. We hear of a woman with a deep commitment to exposing this 'other' culture. She writes with the eyes of an American female yet is obviously deeply in love with this country's people, if not always the ideals of their government. The ways of life are so strikingly difficult. I was overwhelmed by the seeming oppression that the general population live under. There is a remarkable contrast between public and private life and Sciolino was fortunate enough to be invited into the private spheres that would often elude a typical tourist's quest. The acceptance of senior Imams and clerics and government officials to provide her with sensitive material makes this such a critical read and I found it particularly interesting when her Iranian female friends allowed her into their private spaces, where the public veil of the chador could be lifted. The exploration of various areas of Iran journeyed us from ruins in Persepolis to the rigours of religious life in Qom. There was always an overlook at how the Islamic Revolution was still occurring and the ways that this strict religious governance affects people truly exposes the current national psyche that separates us so much from Iranians in the modern age. 'Death to America', a much-repeated slogan in the Revolution must have meant that it was particularly dangerous for Sciolino to research this book, but she demonstrates that things are changing and in fact most Iranians would love to actually visit America and it is this that makes her as an individual, as fascinating to them as they are to her. I think that for anyone who wishes to understand Iran, in its modern situation, especially with the rhetoric of the current global political climate, that this book is a most essential read.
Profile Image for J.I..
Author 2 books35 followers
June 21, 2015
What an incredible, if very limited, insight into a culture. While it is written by an outsider, it is an educated, thoughtful, and considerate one. The main focus of this book is on the political changes of Iran, mostly focusing from the revolution to 2000, though with extended commentaries of the time before, for context, and full of cultural, personal, and historical tidbits.

What is striking about Sciolino's book is how careful it is to maintain its distance of authority. While she has been covering the region for decades, traveled extensively, made friends and contacts all over the country in all kinds of situations, she is still an outsider looking in, trying to make sense of this world from her own viewpoints. Sciolino often points out her relative position, when attempting to bridge the gaps of these worlds, and the result is that the reader feels that they know this world better, but not that they have a complete understanding of it.

Obviously, with a book that is largely concerned with Iran politically (in terms of understanding it, not in terms of predicting or defeating or promoting, or whatever), the date is something to keep in mind. The last edition has a 2006 afterward that addresses this a little, but Iran has had a very interesting place in the world since then, and that simply isn't covered. This isn't a flaw in the book, it is simply something to keep in mind. That being said, I would highly recommend it, as it was striking and marvelous.
Profile Image for Katherine.
Author 15 books57 followers
August 2, 2009
This was a long haul. I'm glad I picked it up this last month, given all that going on in Iran right now. I really feel like I have a better understanding of the country (which isn't saying much, since I had almost no understanding of it before). Elaine Sciolino has used her experience of more than twenty years as a correspondent in Iran to write a book about the modern face of the nation. It's extremely detailed, covers a wide variety of subjects, and stays interesting all the way through. I would say it was even a bit TOO long, since it did seem to drag along in the sections about the economy.

Sciolino has obviously had a very interesting career, and has met a wide range of very interesting people. There's a tendency to name-drop that gets a little annoying at times, but mostly I really appreciate the chance to see Iran from so many different angles. I would like to see her take on what's been going on with the recent Iranian presidential election, as I'm sure she's got something very insightful to say. Overall, this book is a useful introduction to a country about which most Americans (myself recently included) know very little.
Profile Image for Fadillah.
830 reviews51 followers
March 2, 2018
I've read many books on Iran but it never came from the perspective of non iranian or foreigner. This book is somewhat interesting. Ive read Shirin Ebadi, Houshang Asadi, Marjane Satrapi, their book is the manifestation of their personal story ; It might involve other people but at the end of the day, they are the star of their own book. Sciolino's approach of writing is simply based on her observation of what's Iran like on the daily basis. She ventured into the country that she had little knowledge of in the name of journalism. She encountered countless of experiences ; some were bitter, some were sweet and some were leaving such depth mark in her own memory. Every chapter that she wrote connected with her experience and ordinary people of Iran. I might re-read this book. What a great book!
Profile Image for Vasil Kolev.
1,139 reviews199 followers
January 13, 2017
While reading this, at some times when I saw what the people there endured and even liked, I got reminded of something from Pratchett ("Interesting times"):

"You know their big dish down on the coast?”
“No.”
“Pig’s ear soup. Now, what’s that tell you about a place, eh?”
Rincewind shrugged. “Very provident people?”
“Some other bugger pinches the pig.”

Maybe there's a chance for this people.

The book itself is great, and has a lot more depth than what's expected from journalists.
Profile Image for Adam.
26 reviews19 followers
October 9, 2008
2.5 stars really... It's a great way to see inside contemporary Iranian society, but as far as her focus and translation of Islam or political happenings, they are quite funny and a little warped. She has no ability to see the grammar of Iranian, neh Islamic, societies and customs. I'll put up some funny quotes...
44 reviews
September 13, 2011
Double feature with NIne Parts Desire. Fantastic and thorough exploration of contemporary Iran through the 1990's. Of course, a bit has changed since then. Sciolino took a well deserved transfer to the Paris bureau so don't expect a sequel from her, but anyone who wants to learn more about Iran (and seek context behind the headlines) will enjoy this mucho.
Profile Image for Monta.
529 reviews11 followers
October 21, 2020
Although it was a bit of a slog, I found it fascinating to read about the years of and just after the revolution. I'd like to find another book like this that covers the last 20 years! She was actually on the plane that brought the Ayatollah Khomeini back to Iran as the revolution began! And she does an unprecedented job of taking us inside the homes and minds of women in Iran.
Profile Image for Darla Ebert.
1,193 reviews6 followers
January 28, 2016
Well researched, well written and very hard to put down. I learned a LOT but for some reason just cannot keep straight Iran and Iraq...with only one consonant difference no wonder. However if I can remember that one used to be Persia, that helps. Sometimes.
Profile Image for Samantha Soon.
55 reviews7 followers
August 8, 2019
一直對中東的一切都充滿著迷與好奇,或許是因為知道此生應該很難可以走到那些神秘的國度裡(除非以後有幸找到充滿冒險精神且志同道合的朋友吧哈)。

這本書是在某書展殺到的,躺在書堆裡許久。這一次一讀卻欲罷不能,由紐約時報特派記者從女性與美國人的角度寫下的伊朗。關於伊朗的歷史和政治變化冗長且深遠,其實不太好理解,但作者還是可以在這些枷鎖以外緊緊扣住我的興趣。對於生長在回教國家的我,關於伊朗的一切又熟悉又陌生,似近似遠。那些說不定會成為我的日常的野蠻,還有早已成為日常的反覆與不定,讓人心悸。真的有機會的話,我更想翻開波斯帝國的故事,去追尋那些在傳統之中早已淡去的美麗。
Profile Image for Cordelia.
47 reviews
January 13, 2008
This book gives a deep picture of life in Iran with all its contrasts. She speaks about society and all its parts and helped me understand what makes up the Iranian psyche.
Profile Image for Lauri.
16 reviews
August 25, 2008
If you want to understand the Iranian people and the history of our relations - both culturally and politically - read this book.
811 reviews
June 21, 2017
Good background through 2000 and on Iranian culture and pride. Makes me want to read a follow-up to current Iranian politics and public opinion - can anyone recommend one??
Profile Image for Michelle .
53 reviews24 followers
March 5, 2018
I'm glad I got through Persian Mirrors because, as with every book, there were many takeaways from it. Albeit slightly outdated, I feel like I've learnt a great deal about Iran, its people - ranging from those in courts to those in the foundations to those at grassroots level, about its relations with the US, and slightly more about the Middle East in general. This was an engaging and rapturous read that combines travelogue with history and politics without oversimplifying aspects of the latter!
21 reviews
May 22, 2017
As this book was written approximately 18 years prior to my visit to Iran, it was interesting to note the changes in culture since 1999. Through her various contacts with her job, Ms Sciolino was able to enjoy opportunities that many would have not been privy to. It is these events which gives the author the first hand account of what was really happening in Iran in the years leading up to the revolution in 1979. The book is aptly named which becomes apparent after its reading.
100 reviews2 followers
September 2, 2025
Only after I finished this book, I noticed she's the author of "Adventures in the Louvre" I just read. Totally different genre, equally well written. Deep and insightful analysis can be applied to either a museum and a country; it seems.
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