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Honeymoon in Tehran

Two Years of Love and Danger in Iran

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Azadeh Moaveni was an American reporter in Tehran in 2005 covering the rise of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the new president of Iran, when the unexpected happened—she met her soul mate, fell in love, and became pregnant. Facing an uncertain future, she continues to publish increasingly sensitive reports on Iran in Time magazine, while hiding her pregnancy from the religious authorities until she could marry. Shortly after giving birth a government source—her minder known mysteriously as Mr. X—tells her she is the subject of an investigation and will soon be arrested and sent to the notorious Evin prison. It becomes evident she is being spied on: cars tracing her, her phone tapped, her email monitored. Fearing for her safety—and that of her young family—Moaveni flees Iran in 2007, leaving the country she had hoped to help through her journalism.

This is a powerful, poignant, often funny, and ultimately harrowing story about a young woman facing her future in a very dangerous place.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 20, 2008
      In her new memoir, American-born journalist Moaveni (Lipstick Jihad
      ) returns to Tehran in 2005 to cover Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's election for Time
      magazine, hoping to make the city her permanent home. Her plans are complicated by the standoff with the U.S. over Iran's nuclear program, as well as several unexpected turns in her life. She falls in love, moves in with her boyfriend, becomes pregnant, gets married—in that order—in a country that has no word for “boyfriend” and no qualms about brutally beating unmarried pregnant women. Through her own experience, Moaveni reports on the growing apathy of the people of Iran, a society burdened by staggering inflation and tensions between religion, political oppression and secular life, the latter ever more enticing through ubiquitous, illegal satellite television. Gradually, the idealism and religious faith that characterized Moaveni's younger years wane. With the birth of her son, her misgivings come to a head, compounded by the spying, threats and intimidation she experienced at the hands of the Ministry of Intelligence. Moaveni, who now lives in London with her family, has penned a story of coming-of-age in two cultures with a keen eye and a measured tone.

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