Journey from the Land of No : A Girlhood Caught in Revolutionary Iran

  Author:    ROYA HAKAKIAN
  ISBN:    0609810308
  Sales Rank:    177416
  Published:    2005-06-28
  Publisher:    Three Rivers Press
  # Pages:    272
  Binding:    Paperback
  Avg. Rating:    5.0 based on 30 reviews
  Used Offers:    27 from $4.65
  Amazon Price:    $10.40
  (Data above last updated:  2008-07-04 22:16:50 EST)
  
  
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Journey from the Land of No : A Girlhood Caught in Revolutionary Iran
  
From the Hardcover

“We stormed every classroom, inscribed our slogans on the blackboard . . . Never had mayhem brought more peace. All our lives we had been taught the virtues of behaving, and now we were discovering the importance of misbehaving. Too much fear had tainted our days. Too many afternoons had passed in silence, listening to a fanatic’s diatribes. We were rebelling because we were not evil, we had not sinned, and we knew nothing of the apocalypse. . . . This was 1979, the year that showed us we could make our own destinies. We were rebelling because rebelling was all we could do to quell the rage in our teenage veins. Together as girls we found the courage we had been told was not in us.”

In Journey from the Land of No Roya Hakakian recalls her childhood and adolescence in prerevolutionary Iran with candor and verve. The result is a beautifully written coming-of-age story about one deeply intelligent and perceptive girl’s attempt to ям?nd an authentic voice of her own at a time of cultural closing and repression. Remarkably, she manages to re-create a time and place dominated by religious fanaticism, violence, and fear with an open heart and often with great humor.

Hakakian was twelve years old in 1979 when the revolution swept through Tehran. The daughter of an esteemed poet, she grew up in a household that hummed with intellectual life. Family gatherings were punctuated by witty, satirical exchanges and spontaneous recitations of poetry. But the Hakakians were also part of the very small Jewish population in Iran who witnessed the iron fist of the Islamic fundamentalists increasingly tightening its grip. It is with the innocent confusion of youth that Roya describes her discovery of a swastika—“a plus sign gone awry, a dark reptile with four hungry claws”—painted on the wall near her home. As a schoolgirl she watched as friends accused of reading blasphemous books were escorted from class by Islamic Society guards, never to return. Only much later did Roya learn that she was spared a similar fate because her teacher admired her writing.

Hakakian relates in the most poignant, and at times painful, ways what life was like for women after the country fell into the hands of Islamic fundamentalists who had declared an insidious war against them, but we see it all through the eyes of a strong, youthful optimist who somehow came up in the world believing that she was different, knowing she was special. At her loneliest, Roya discovers the consolations of writing while sitting on the rooftop of her house late at night. There, “pen in hand, I led my own chorus of words, with a melody of my own making.” And she discovers the craft that would ultimately enable her to find her own voice and become her own person.

A wonderfully evocative story, Journey from the Land of No reveals an Iran most readers have not encountered and marks the debut of a stunning new talent.
                  Reader Reviews 1 - 24 of 24                 
  
  
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04-15-07 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Using a snapshot to tell a story
Reviewer Permalink
The author was incredibly adept at using a well written snapshot of an event in her life to give the reader an overall sense of what was going on in the country during the Iranian revolution. This author can write!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-01 19:19:31 EST)
04-14-07 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Insights on revolution
Reviewer Permalink
I've never examined the Iranian Revolution, and this book provided great insight. By reading Roya's story, I witnessed how passion for and support of the revolution turned into horror when things got out of control. Revolutions often turn out this way; let the mistakes of the past be warnings for all of us today! Sometimes what looks good doesn't really turn out to be so great! This book, however, looks good and IS good. Journey from the Land of No is a must-read as it provides excellent insight.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-01 19:19:31 EST)
02-09-07 2 1\2
(Hide Review...)  Don't bother!
Reviewer Permalink
I truly enjoy reading memoirs, but this one did not grab me at all. I couldn't wait until I was done, and regret wasting my time. There are numerous other books on this topic much more interesting!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-06-28 09:06:00 EST)
01-05-07 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Eye-opening
Reviewer Permalink
This is an excellent book; I highly recommend it. I learned a lot, and Ms. Hakakian is a great author. One word of warning; she does not claim to be completely unbiased about what occured in and before 1979 in Iran; and she stays true to this claim. So, the book is a bit one-sided, I suppose; but it tells the side of the story that I also had never heard, which is important.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-06-28 09:06:00 EST)
01-04-07 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Eye-opening
Reviewer Permalink
This is an excellent book; I highly recommend it. I learned a lot, and Ms. Hakakian is a great author. One word of warning; she does not claim to be completely unbiased about what occured in and before 1979 in Iran; and she stays true to this claim. So, the book is a bit one-sided, I suppose; but it tells the side of the story that I also had never heard, which is important.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-02-09 16:59:39 EST)
12-03-06 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Vefry Good Middle Class Perspective
Reviewer Permalink
This book is a treasure for those interested in enhancing their understading of religious minorities' "Nationalist" mindset in Iran, particularly during the Pahlavi period. One has to take into cosideration that a large number of Jews in Iran converted to Islam for pragmatic reasons prior to the pahlavi dynasty. The brand of pre-Islamic nationanist secularism promoted by the Pahlavi shahs in Iran is ever present throughout this book. Personally, I believe the author is an Iranian patriot. She does, to some degree, have an undesrstanding of an "Iranian consciousness" regardless of religious inclination. She is very sympathetic toward "martyrs" of Iran-Iraq war, to the extend to which she modestly discredits herself as a moral authority on the subject due to the fact that she did not pay a physical price for defending Iran. I am very glad that I read this book. It reaffirmed my belief that many Iranian Jews consider themselves Iranians first and then perhaps Jewish, quite similar to their secular Muslim Iranian cousins.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-06-28 09:06:00 EST)
11-25-06 5 1\1
(Hide Review...)  Top-notch memoir
Reviewer Permalink
Roya Hakakian's memoir of the ayatollahs' revolution from the perspective of a Jewish teen-ager is absolutely thrilling.
From Roya's description, it was Berlin 1933 all over again with Jews mouthing the slogans of the revolution and praising Khomeini as the savior from the wicked shah. With Jews not naming Israel but regarding Tehran as their homeland. With the Jewish school suddenly
naming a woman in veils as the new headmaster and demanding from the girls why Jewish fathers always deflower their daughters.
Roya Hakakian, a former producer for CBS' "60 Minutes," is a wonderful writer who infuses this sad story with a page-turning intensity that is rare in non-fiction. I heartily recommend it.
--
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-06-28 09:06:00 EST)
10-25-06 2 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  okay, except compared to the competition
Reviewer Permalink
"Journey to the Land of No" is a first-person memoir of a Jewish girl growing up in Iran during the Revolution. The book describes what her life and the life of her family was like before and after this cataclysmic event.

Having developed an unaccountable interest in the Iranian Revolution during the past year, I have read perhaps a dozen books about this subject.

Hakakian's book, while not bad, would have to be toward the bottom of the list of books you should read about this subject. It just didn't grab me.

And certainly there has been no shortage of books written by women who lived in Iran during the Revolution and have since escaped. But if you're only going to read one or two, there is much better fare out there. "Reading Lolita in Tehran" is searing and unforgettable, and the graphic novel "Persepolis" is simply excoriating. This latter would be at the top of said list.

Yeah, the competition is pretty stiff these days. The bar for writing an "I'm an Iranian exile and here's why"-type book has been set incredibly high by so much good stuff out there now, and Hakakian's effort doesn't quite measure up.

Anyhow. Compared to harrowing books like those, Hakakian's story is -- dare I say it? -- ho-hum. Occasionally it is tenderly written, but I left the book feeling that she had little to say, and because, at least compared to other authors writing about the same subject, little remarkable happened to her.

What is most regrettable about the book, I suppose, is that Hakakian's Jewishness is almost incidental to her tale. This is sad. She certainly mentions that she was Jewish, and this does form the cornerstone for a few events in the story, but basically what happens to her and her family could have happened to pretty much any Iranian during that time.

And this is regrettable because the Jewish angle was the one really original thing this book had going for it. And the author, I must aver, failed to really explore it or make it come alive.

In fact, so forgettable is the whole outing that, a few weeks after having read this book, I am unable to recall a single incident from it.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-11-17 14:55:09 EST)
09-11-06 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  gripping analysis
Reviewer Permalink

I never read a more gripping analysis of prerevolutionary Iran and Khomeinis revolution. I loved the rich and beautiful language and the vivid, colourful descriptions. The book is full of homesickness, nostalgia, political awareness and good judgement.

Marina Kushner
Author
The Truth About Caffeine: How Companies That Promote It Deceive Us and What We Can Do about It

(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-09-13 19:59:03 EST)
08-14-06 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Couldn't put it down
Reviewer Permalink
Amazing story, beautifully written. It has all the elements of an exciting novel, and it is true, which makes it even more awesome.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-10-21 14:56:53 EST)
07-19-06 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  loss...
Reviewer Permalink
A Persian friend gave me this book. I couldn't put it down, so poetic and real. As we live in times of war and devastation, this book reminds us of the power of ideologies and politics.

It is about the turmoil of war and the price that innocent people pay so others can prosper and prove a point!!

You feel the love of a country and the sadness losing that land, the uprooting of your beliefs in the voice of Roya. Her description is so vivid and sentimental. I am not sure if her suffering pertains to one sect or race, I think she meant to portray the universal downfall of humanity and the blindness of extreme.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-31 14:17:01 EST)
04-08-06 1 0\11
(Hide Review...)  Iran
Reviewer Permalink
First and most importantly, Roya is not Jews but an Iranian Arminian. According to her own statement she made a mistake to take part in revolution. Now, how can someone trust her she is right for telling others to reject this new state?

She made a fasle statement; she claimed that she did not want Khomenie to be the leader of Iran. she stated that during course of revolution she would go on top of her house roof and chanted God is great and Khomenie is leader.

(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-06-27 18:32:26 EST)
04-08-06 1 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Iran
Reviewer Permalink
First and most importantly, Roya is not Jews but an Iranian Arminian. According to her won statement she made a mistake to take part in revolution. Now, how can someone trust her she is right?

She made a fasle statement; she claimed that she did not want Khomenie to be the leader of Iran. she stated that during course of revolution she would go on top of her house roof and chanted God is great and Khomenie is leader.

(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-04-14 14:43:34 EST)
04-08-06 1 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Iran
Reviewer Permalink
First and most importantly, Roya is not Jews but an Iranian Arminian. According to her won statement she made a mistake to take part in revolution. Now, how can someone trust her she is right?
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-04-12 16:48:49 EST)
03-15-06 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  A real eyeopener
Reviewer Permalink
Reading Roya's accounting of her ordeal gives one a profound feeling of the reality of the time. It is amazing that Roya's experience had such an effect on her that the details still remain intact for her reproduce such an amazing book.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-19 16:34:42 EST)
11-08-05 5 2\2
(Hide Review...)  WOW!
Reviewer Permalink
Laugh, cry, remember and connect to home! Roya makes you do all that, especially if you grew up in Iran @ the beginning of the revolution. enjoy and pass it along to all the women in your family.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-06-27 18:32:26 EST)
10-16-05 5 4\4
(Hide Review...)  Journey from the Land of No: A Girlhood Caught in Revolutionary Iran
Reviewer Permalink
Roya Hakakian comes from a secular Jewish family who identifies with Iran. The family is integrated into Iranian life and Roya looks forward to the wonderful changes that will come with the Revolution. This is the story about the changes that came to the ordinary people of Iran. The dying of hope, the hopelessness of change. The story covers the lives of the Hakakian family, singled out for being Jewish, and the lives of the Moslem and Jewish families they know and who are their friends. This is not a happy story. It brings down to the indiviual level the failure of the Islamic Revolution in Iran.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-06-27 18:32:26 EST)
08-19-05 5 5\5
(Hide Review...)  Reading "1984" in Tehran . . .
Reviewer Permalink
The somber cover, the title, and the reference to prison abuses at the opening of this book are a little misleading. This memoir is not especially dark or grim, and the journey it recounts is an internal one, more from the land of "yes" than "no." It captures that particular youthful optimism that buoys up children and adolescents in the worst of times. And the Islamic revolution in Iran becomes the worst of times for the community of 100,000 Jews living in Tehran in the late 1970s, as the monarchy is toppled and the Ayatollah Khomeini returns from exile to assume power.

Hakakian's book is a vividly and wonderfully remembered account of her coming of age in these tumultuous years. The equally gifted younger sister of three precocious brothers, an admitted "class clown," she happily plays her own growing self-confidence and self-awareness against the reader's knowledge of coming events. Through her, we experience the almost universal public euphoria that followed the fall of the Shah, and while she chooses to discount its significance, we see mounting evidence of the approaching political and social forces that will finally drive her family to join the Jewish exodus from Iran.

This is a fine, well-written book, often entertaining and sometimes starkly moving. The parallels Hakakian draws to Orwell's "1984" illustrate the gradual erosion of self that occurs when the state attempts to control individuals' thoughts and desires. In this and other ways, it's an excellent companion to Nafisi's "Reading Lolita in Tehran."
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-06-27 18:32:26 EST)
08-01-05 5 4\4
(Hide Review...)  Excellent choice for a literature class
Reviewer Permalink
I used this memoir as one of three core texts for an intensive summer course and my students loved it. It is beautifully written, poetic and very honest. I lived in Iran from 1983 to 1993 and I believe this is the most accurate memoir of life in Iran that I have read.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-06-27 18:32:26 EST)
07-07-05 5 4\4
(Hide Review...)  A Must Read!
Reviewer Permalink
This beautifully written book explores the Iranian Revolution from the perspective of a young Jewish girl. Hakakian is a delicious writer and her description of pre and post-revolutionary Iran is vivid and stimulating. As a frequent reader of this genre, I found this book to be far and away the best in its category and highly recommend it to anyone interested in Iran and the country's current imbroglio, women's studies or Judaism.

(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-06-27 18:32:26 EST)
05-23-05 5 6\6
(Hide Review...)  Wonderfully moving memoir!
Reviewer Permalink
This is a beautifully written book that makes you feel like you are in Iran at the time of the revolution. Ms. Hakakian's prose brings to life the sounds, smells and feel of life in revolutionary Iran, through the eyes of a young girl.
Not only is it an enjoyable book to read, but educational as well, especially for Americans whose view of these times was tinted by the media, offering us a singular view of Iran. Ms. Hakakian offers a beautiful mosaic of her life in Iran and the emotions of becoming a stranger in your own land. Read it and enjoy!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-06-27 18:32:26 EST)
04-05-05 5 15\16
(Hide Review...)  A reporter's memoir of a revolutionary girlhood
Reviewer Permalink
Journalist Roya Hakakian's beautifully written memoir of growing up in pre- and post-revolutionary Iran makes a striking contrast to another journalist's Iranian memoir, Azadeh Moaveni's "Lipstick Jihad," a contemporary portrait of Tehran from the viewpoint of a Californian-Iranian, looking for identity. While Moaveni battled her mother over Madonna's music, Hakakian rioted against a fanatical headmistress who found sin in a strand of female hair.

Hakakian describes a rather idyllic childhood in a quiet house in Tehran's "Alley of the Distinguished." She is the only daughter of a Jewish schoolmaster and scholar, beloved baby sister to three brothers. Her closest friend, Z, is a Muslim neighbor girl and her first inkling of the stirrings abroad were the political speeches Z's older sister and her devout Great-Uncle listened to in secret.

Though one by one her three older brothers are sent out of the country, Hakakian finds herself caught up in the heady togetherness of revolution. "Within weeks, Tehran seemed to have matured by years. Even drunkards stopped ranting about their personal misery. Neighbors did not fight. Cars honked constantly, but not in gridlock, only to announce the advance of the uprising, or the fall of another barracks."

She explores the child's perceptions: the jangly scariness of her parents' tense arguments and distressed uncertainty contrast unfavorably with the liberation let loose in the streets. But almost immediately anti-Semitic slogans appear on walls. The Hakakians sell their home and move into an apartment. Islamic dress is imposed and then the Jewish headmistress vanishes one day, and her Muslim replacement asks Hakakian why Jewish men customarily deflower their daughters.

Still, politics remains a youthful focal point and the young intellectuals exercise their idealism in dissent. Another moment of startling clarity comes when the group is caught with incriminating papers, and dismissed as irrelevant as soon as they are discovered to be Jewish.

As idealism fades and repression casts a dark gloom over daily life, Hakakian discovers that her old friend Z has grown grave and distant, Z's older sister, the fervent revolutionary, jailed and tortured, her mother's spirit broken.

Hakakian's story is a layered, nuanced remembrance of one girl's awakening to adulthood, a Jewish view of Iran's upheaval, and a chronicle of a country's nightmarish descent from liberation into a maelstrom of repression and fear.

Portsmouth Herald, March 27, 2005
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-06-27 18:32:26 EST)
04-04-05 5 10\10
(Hide Review...)  Journey from the Land of No
Reviewer Permalink
Often articles and books written about the 1979 revolution in Iran are partial. Most are written by people who claim to have foreseen the catastrophic consequences of the revolution and never supported it. Few writers are bold and introspective enough to acknowledge their excitement about the possibility of a democratic change at the time, followed by sobering disenchantment during the immediate post-revolutionary years. Roya, using an exquisitely vivid language, becomes the voice of a generation as it underwent this latter political and personal maturation. She opens a window into the minds of Iranians circa 1979, and follows the dreams of a hopeful nation as they turn into nightmares. Incorporated into this mosaic of politics and family life are images of the private lives of Iranians living in a multi-ethnic, multi-religious society. If you want to learn more about the complexity that is Iran, this book will be a reliable and an entertaining guide.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-06-27 18:32:26 EST)
03-13-05 5 8\8
(Hide Review...)  A poet's memoir
Reviewer Permalink
Roya Hakakian has written the most beautiful memoir I have ever read. Only a poet could tell her life story - and the upheavals of the Iranian culture around her - with such perfect rhythm and nuance.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-04-06 15:32:32 EST)
  
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