Title: Chicken with Plums
Author: Marjane Satrapi
Publisher: Pantheon 2006
Genre: Graphic Novel
Pages: 90
Rating: 3 / 5 stars
Reading Challenges: Graphic Novel; Women Author; Mount TBR; Book Bingo -- 2 from TBR; T4MC -- Women Author (15 points)
We are in Tehran in 1958, and Nasser Ali Khan, one of Iran’s most revered tar players, discovers that his beloved instrument is irreparably damaged. Though he tries, he cannot find one to replace it, one whose sound speaks to him with the same power and passion with which his music speaks to others. In despair, he takes to his bed, renouncing the world and all its pleasures, closing the door on the demands and love of his wife and his four children. Over the course of the week that follows, his family and close friends attempt to change his mind, but Nasser Ali slips further and further into his own reveries: flashbacks and flash-forwards (with unexpected appearances by the likes of the Angel of Death and Sophia Loren) from his own childhood through his children’s futures. And as the pieces of his story slowly fall into place, we begin to understand the profundity of his decision to give up life.
Interesting story... I must admit that I liked her Persepolis series much better than this one. But this volume does have some redeeming qualities. I loved the look into the head of Nasser Ali. Instead of a linear story, we get flashbacks and almost stream of consciousness. It's an interesting choice of style. I liked it. And the drawings were amazing as ever. The stark black and white with figures really lends powers to the story.