” In this fictional novel Sayers weaves the many colored threads of Persian society in to a beautiful novel, a caltural carpet to qali “———- Hossein Ibrahimi Anahita by: Meghan Nuttall Sayers was last modified: August 8th, 2007 by mahnaz badihian
Writer Kurt Vonnegut dies at 84
LOVE HAS NO LIMITS by Pirooz Ebrahimi Finally I had finished high school so I had started to look over the “student guide” to decide what course to choose. What I really, really saw in my mind was the image of a man in a military uniform. Love Has No […]
And Suddenly the Woman Said: “Leopard!” by Ezzat Goushegir Standing at the window facing the forest, the woman was singing the lyrics to the Cupid and Psyche opera. Exactly at the point when Psyche, curious and care-ridden, holds the candle up to Cupid’s face to examine her complexion in the […]
the Saccharinist – Most Adults Are Bad
We saw this article in: https://saccharinist.blogspot.com/index.html This blog came into existence because the Saccharinist was fatigued with all of the horrible news in the world and the complete lack of honest evaluation of it on a regular basis by anyone in any mainstream or even off-the-cuff-mainstream media. Everyday the news, […]
When everyone is Lonely No One is Lonely I was one of those people who was never lonely, even in loneliness…how I can be lonely when I don’t know the most accessible person that I know. Life did not leave me a moment to be alone with her to know […]
Nobel Prize—Orhan Pamuk
copied from : the saccharinist First, the Nobel Prize for Literature went to Orhan Pamuk— a highly-acclaimed best-selling writer whose most high profile claim to fame has been his condemnation by the Turkish government for being anti-Turkish because he has made a cause for himself (some say merely to gain […]
End of Era: Mahfouz is Gone
I have a question. It’s a doozie though, so I don’t even know how to phrase it. But the gist of this question, in its general and simplified form, not pertaining to any particular subject, is such: what are we doing here? The “what” probably should be capitalized, as should […]
Sadegh Hedayat Sadegh (or Sadeq) Hedayat (in Persian: صادق هدایت; February 17 1903, Tehran—9 April 1951, Paris) is Iran’s foremost modern writer of prose fiction and short stories. He was born to an aristocratic family and was educated at the Lycée Français (French high school) in that city. In 1925 […]