The Prince

The Prince

by James Buchan (Author), Hushang Golshiri (Author)

Synopsis

Set in the mid 1920s in Iran. In a crumbling house in a provincial town, the last survivor of a deposed dynasty is slowly dying from tuberculosis. The old prince's domain has been reduced to his domestic household, where the former glories of his ancestors haunt him. Drifting in and out of reality, the prince relives episodes of his forebears' exulted and often brutal past; a macabre time of public despotism when men were put to death by being sheathed in plaster, and when a child might be beheaded as punishment for poor school work. Long-dead relatives threaten menacingly from photographs the old prince surrounds himself with, damaged images fleetingly brought to life by a fractured hallucinatory mind, only to fade away as another vestige from the past rattles in its picture frame. As hazy memories bleed into one another, it soon becomes clear that the most tortuous for the dying man is that of his wife Fakronessa, who used to taunt him with the energy and violence of his grandfather and great-grandfather, forcing him then to avenge himself by sleeping with their servant Fakhri, and subsequently driving his wife to an early grave.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 160
Publisher: Harvill Secker
Published: 24 Nov 2005

ISBN 10: 1843431718
ISBN 13: 9781843431718
Book Overview: Translated from the Persian by James Buchan When this novel was first published in Iran in 1969, as Prince Ehtejab, Golshiri was immediately acclaimed as one of the first writers to apply modern literary techniques to depict the demise of the Iranian aristocracy. 20040624

Media Reviews
There is no denying the power of Golshiri s writing . . . This is one of the most disturbing novels I have read in a long time. It s made all the more unsettling for being sensational only in the skill of its telling. Rosemary Goring, Glasgow Herald
Author Bio
HUSHANG GOLSHIRI (1937-2000) was born in Isfahan, Iran. He worked as a teacher, published a collection of short stories and edited a literary journal. In 1978 he travelled to the USA, but returned the following year to become a leading writer and critic of post-revolution Iran. Golshiri was awarded Germany's Erich Maria Remarque Prize in 1999 for his efforts to fight oppressions and to promote democracy and human rights.