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   Book Info

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An Enduring Love: My Life with the Shah  
Author: Farah Pahlavi
ISBN: 140135209X
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
The memoir of Farah (Diba) Pahlavi, widow of the Shah of Iran, seems, at first glance, like a clone of Noor's bestselling Leap of Faith. Both queens were intelligent young women when they met and married their older kings; both remain discreet about their intimate lives with their husbands (who both loved piloting planes and playing with their children); both immersed themselves, as new queens, in cultural programs and social betterment work for their people; and both end their memoirs shortly after the deaths of their husbands. The parallels are almost uncanny - at least until midway through Pahlavi's story, when the real differences emerge. In 1963, the Shah began his "white revolution" to modernize Iran by instituting land reform, women's rights and workers' rights; Communists and fundamentalist clerics vehemently opposed these changes. In Pahlavi's eyes, the monarchy stood for liberalization, even if its enforcement agencies were condemned worldwide for human rights abuses. To her, criticism of the monarchy only supported Khomeini's Islamic fundamentalist opposition. As the insurgency gained strength and the royal family weighed exit strategies, Pahlavi shouldered a new, personal burden: the Shah's concealed battle with cancer. Asylum offers were few. Sadat welcomed them to Egypt, but their stays in the Bahamas, Mexico, the United States and Panama were politically difficult. The Shah's medical treatments, meanwhile, were so bungled, so shaded by political maneuvering, that Pahlavi resorts to quoting extensively from one doctor's records. She ends her account with the Shah's death in 1980, their youngest daughter's death and the Iran-Iraq War, while Pahlavi's life has continued in Paris and Washington, DC. Readers seeking a female perspective on Iran's turbulent recent history will enjoy this candid, straightforward account.Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


From Booklist
A lot has been written, over the years, about the 1979 overthrow of the shah of Iran, and most of it has been political history. This book, written by the shah's widow, the former queen of Iran, should appeal mostly to those readers whose interests run more to personal than political history. Although there is politics in the book, it is primarily the story of a young architecture student who, in the late 1950s, wandered into what looked like a fairy tale. It's the story of a girl who becomes a queen and who embraces all the pomp and circumstance that come with the position but who also works to retain her individuality. Pahlavi followed her husband when he left Iran and, since his death in 1980, has lived in exile, finally settling in the U.S. Gracefully translated from the French by Clancy, the book is a loving portrait of the man (and country) Pahlavi loved and lost. Yes, many will say this picture of the shah and of Iran during his reign is a portrait seen through rose-colored glasses. Tint aside, however, the book offers a fascinating look at a remarkable woman and contributes a new perspective on the history of a troubled nation. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Washington Post
"Engrossing...the whole narrative is a delectable treat."




An Enduring Love: My Life with the Shah

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Her story began like a fairy tale. At the age of twenty-one, Farah Diba married the shah of Iran, Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi. In a matter of days, her quiet life was turned upside down: her coronation as the empress of Iran was covered in the world's press, and overnight she became an international celebrity. A loving marriage, the raising of four children, and a devotion to social and cultural causes marked her early years as queen, although there were already signs of grave national divisions on the horizon.

Twenty years later the dream had turned into a nightmare: demonstrations and riots shook the country, and Farah and the shah decided to leave in order to avoid bloodshed. Seriously ill, the exiled shah would never again see his home. Together they sought refuge in Morocco, the Bahamas, Mexico, and Panama - hiding out in a New York hospital while the shah received treatment - until they were finally given shelter by Egyptian president Anwar al-Sadat, himself assassinated by fundamentalists just eighteen months later.

The story of the shah's last years is one of the late twentieth century's most poignant and troubling episodes, as America's tense relationship with the Middle East began to reveal its flawed foundations. For the first time, Farah Diba - the shahbanou - wife of the last emperor of Iran, breaks her silence and tells the story of her love for a man and his country. An Enduring Love offers her intimate view of a time of upheaval, but stands above all as a powerful human document from one whose life was caught up in an epic and tragic national struggle.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

The memoir of Farah (Diba) Pahlavi, widow of the Shah of Iran, seems, at first glance, like a clone of Noor's bestselling Leap of Faith. Both queens were intelligent young women when they met and married their older kings; both remain discreet about their intimate lives with their husbands (who both loved piloting planes and playing with their children); both immersed themselves, as new queens, in cultural programs and social betterment work for their people; and both end their memoirs shortly after the deaths of their husbands. The parallels are almost uncanny-at least until midway through Pahlavi's story, when the real differences emerge. In 1963, the Shah began his "white revolution" to modernize Iran by instituting land reform, women's rights and workers' rights; Communists and fundamentalist clerics vehemently opposed these changes. In Pahlavi's eyes, the monarchy stood for liberalization, even if its enforcement agencies were condemned worldwide for human rights abuses. To her, criticism of the monarchy only supported Khomeini's Islamic fundamentalist opposition. As the insurgency gained strength and the royal family weighed exit strategies, Pahlavi shouldered a new, personal burden: the Shah's concealed battle with cancer. Asylum offers were few. Sadat welcomed them to Egypt, but their stays in the Bahamas, Mexico, the United States and Panama were politically difficult. The Shah's medical treatments, meanwhile, were so bungled, so shaded by political maneuvering, that Pahlavi resorts to quoting extensively from one doctor's records. She ends her account with the Shah's death in 1980, their youngest daughter's death and the Iran-Iraq War, while Pahlavi's life has continued in Paris and Washington, DC. Readers seeking a female perspective on Iran's turbulent recent history will enjoy this candid, straightforward account. (Mar.) Forecast: Ads in the New York Times and USA Today, a 20/20 appearance, and a 20-city TV satellite tour will ignite sales of Pahlavi's book. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Flat, unconvincing apologia-cum-memoir of the Shah's years as ruler of Iran, from the ex-Shabanou. Pahlavi is on stable ground at first, describing her life as a young girl in a household of middle-class royalists, the social rhythms of her life in Tehran during the 1940s and '50s, her love of the poets Ferdowsi and Hafez, the education her family sought for her, and her early exposure to religious intolerance-a foretaste of things to come. But when she marries the Shah, her prose takes on a defensive tone that makes her claims for his progressiveness deeply suspect. Pahlavi trumpets the merits of the White Revolution, with its gestures at land reform and its undoubted achievements in literacy and extending the vote to women, but is hesitant to give full voice to the shortcomings of land distribution, to the extent of cronyism and economic corruption, and to the circumscription of political participation. She conveniently forgets to mention the CIA's involvement in the return of the Shah to power after the period of the National Front, nor does she acknowledge the sway the US had over Iranian relations in the region. She dismisses the horrendous behavior of the secret police ("quite often heavy-handed, as happens in most developing countries") and fails to accept that by denying open political expression, leaving fundamentalist religious organizations as the only large-scale, organized channels of resistance, the Shah paved the way for fanaticism to have its way in the revolution of 1979. Many readers will also be put off by the author's slavish devotion to the Shah and his infallibility; she is incredulous and adoring when she notes that her husband, his days numbered, actually made aspeech "going so far as to admit that he had made mistakes." Honest in its queen's-eye sentiments, but so selective in its memories and filled with glaring omissions that it fails miserably to inspire any faith in the author's perspective. Agent: Anna Jarota-Chodakowska/XO Editions, Paris

     



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