The Nights Are Quiet in Tehran
| Author | Shida Bayzar |
|---|---|
| Translator | Ruth Martin |
| Publisher | Scribe UK |
Publication date | April 29, 2025 |
| Pages | 228 |
| ISBN | 978-1761386008 |
The Nights Are Quiet in Tehran is a novel by Shida Bayzar. Originally published in German, it was translated to English by Ruth Martin and published by Scribe UK in April 2025. It was longlisted for the International Booker Prize in 2026.[1]
Critical reception
Necessary Fiction concluded that "Bazyar's epic is a reminder that political events reverberate beyond the public sphere; these are also private matters, playing out in conversations in kitchens and bedrooms, and with neighbors over the grill."[2]
European Literature Network noted the book's polyphonic structure and lauded its "deeply felt personal experiences—the growing fear of political persecution in Iran, the love of family, the alienation and cultural loss felt in Germany."[3]
The Saturday Paper stated that "A quietly beautiful exploration of the trauma of losing one's homeland to a savage regime, the novel is testament to how hope and the revolutionary spirit endure in the face of crushing tyranny, how courage cannot be fully stamped out. It lies dormant, awaiting a time when it can again ignite new acts of bravery, new waves of revolution."[4]
References
- ^ Marshall, Alex (2026-02-24). "International Booker Prize Nominees: 13 Books to Get You Talking". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2026-02-28.
- ^ "The Nights Are Quiet in Tehran – Necessary Fiction". necessaryfiction.com. Retrieved 2026-02-28.
- ^ "#RivetingReviews: Mandy Wight reviews THE NIGHTS ARE QUIET IN TEHRAN by Shida Bazyar, translated by Ruth Martin – European Literature Network". www.eurolitnetwork.com. Retrieved 2026-02-28.
- ^ Kwan, Rhoda (2025-05-17). "The Nights Are Quiet in Tehran". The Saturday Paper. Retrieved 2026-02-28.