The Blood of Flowers
By Anita Amirrezvani
This is the tale of a 17th-century Persian village girl who makes her way with her mother to a rich uncle's house in the city of Isfahan after her father's untimely death. As poor relatives, they are treated as servants. The uncle, a master rug maker for the shah, grudgingly teaches her his trade, his love and respect for her increasing with her perseverance and obvious talent. His greedy wife convinces him to accept a three-month "marriage" contract for the girl with a rich horse trader. She learns how to please her "husband" (and herself) sexually, but also learns that he has no intention of making her his permanent wife as she has no money. She vows to make beautiful rugs on her own, and thus ensure her and her mother's financial security. She is banished from her uncle's house when she tells her friend about the marriage contract. She trusts a foreign merchant with her rug and he steals it. Now she must beg and find shelter and a way to begin a new rug. The heroine's mother is a master storyteller, telling tales within this tale that Amirrezvani tells so magically.
The Blood of Flowers is a story of love, loss, learning and sacrifice. The young girl often makes rash, immature decisions and takes extreme risks - something unusual in a Muslim girl in 17th Century Persia. Some of these risks pay dividends, while others bring great misery. This book is also a coming of age story as the young girl moves to womanhood. If you enjoyed Khaled Hosseini's novels you will love this. All the Bra girls enjoyed this novel - it is beautifully written and sumptuous. I especially enjoyed cooking a traditional Persian meal for the girls when we discussed this book - and the walnuts were crunchy :-)
Labels: BRA book club selection, coming of age, historical fiction, Persia
2 Comments:
Sharon,
I'm also part of a book group & may mention this title to the girls. I'm not attracted to horror or science fiction/fantasy. I love the writing of Barbara Kingsolver & Geraldine Brooks. Prodigal Summer by BK is one of my favourites, & I've just finished re-reading GB's Year of Wonders for the next meeting. Have you read it?
Dawn
Haven't read it. Geraldine Brooks new book 'People of the Book' has had good reviews - might be worth reading. 'The Blood of Flowers' is a great book group read. If you do a search on this blog for 'BRA book club selection' you'll find all the books we have read and they are a good selection of popular literature.
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