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Solacers

por Arion Golmakani

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1131,730,640 (5)1
Solacers tells the touching story of a boy's search for family life and safety following the divorce of his parents in Iran during the 1960s. The first child of a heartless father and a discarded mother is left to fend for himself on the streets of Mashhad, seeking food and shelter wherever he can. His lonely early years are an unbelievable tale of cruelty and betrayal on the part of nearly everyone who might be expected to help, save for one aunt who does her best to keep him from starving. But living a harsh and solitary existence has one advantage for this little boy: other than forcing him to be self-reliant, no one attempts to indoctrinate him on rural Iranian society's archaic cultural values and religious beliefs. And so he never accepts his wretched state as fate, choosing instead to dream big dreams about getting an education, having his own family, and starting a new life-possibly in the faraway land called America. He makes a plan and by the age of seventeen he boards a plane to the land of possibilities, where his dreams eventually also take flight.… (más)
Añadido recientemente porjucouch, bueno11, kundia, Yak_Litsy, kybunnies, Arion, SuzanneD
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From Foreward reviews:

The memoir opens as five-year-old Alireza is returned to a foster home by his stepfather. Alireza is considered an orphan, although both his parents are alive and living in the same town.

The boy loves his mother and stepfather, yet Iranian society in the early 1960s requires that he look to his birth father for financial support. And his father wants nothing to do with him. After Alireza’s parents divorce, his mother struggles to support them. Things seem to get better when she marries Mansoor Aqa, the man Alireza calls Baba. But money remains tight and Mansoor Aqa announces that he cannot be expected to raise another man’s son. Alireza’s mother tries to get money from her ex-husband, who beats her in front of her son and sends Alireza to a foster home.

When he is seven, Alireza is taken to yet another home. He had been to dozens of homes in the past two years, and he assumes that this one, like the others, will be temporary when his father fails to make the agreed-up support payments. The family opens their home and opportunities. Kia, the fifteen-year-old boy, treats Alireza as a younger brother and helps enroll him in school. Momon Bozorg, Kia’s mother, shelters Alireza even after her son leaves home and her own circumstances are reduced. Although occasional periods of living on the streets follow, Alireza manages to attend high school and joins the Iranian Navy, which brings him to the United States.

Despite his hardscrabble life, Alireza never succumbs to self-pity or blame. He acknowledges the many “Solacers” who helped him, particularly Kia and Momon Bozorg. The book offers a glimpse of daily life in Iran in the 1960s from a child’s point of view. The story is stronger than the writing, which is sometimes repetitious and clichéd. The book would benefit from a reflective prologue from the adult author.

At the end, Golmakani writes, “Everything that I yearned for as a child I came to have as an adult: a home and a family of my own and all the resources that I needed to take care of them …” As readers, we admire his persistence and his generous heart ( )
  kundia | Sep 15, 2018 |
This book was won in the GoodReads.com First Read contest.



This book is based on the author's childhood in Iran. This book is from the 1950's through the 1970's. This book is heart-wrenching. Reading about how a mother and child can not be together. How a child is forgotten and disregarded. It is about being lost, having not hope and then it turns out that this child makes sure he finds his own way.

This book makes the reader want to cry with frustration or cry about the lost childhood. But this book turns around and gives the reader a small glimpse into something they probably know nothing about.

While this book was a great wonderful read, I will admit to having a hard time reading it. I am glad I read the book but it just makes the reader hurt for the child in the book.

the bunnies and I give this book 5-carrots.

( )
  kybunnies | Oct 19, 2014 |
A very enthralling read of the author's life growing up in Iran. There were times that I felt like I was almost there with was happening, and other times that I just wanted to read more of what was going on :)

Thank you for having this in a giveaway program also and giving me a chance to win and review this copy. Thank you Arion! :) ( )
  k.turner_iv | Dec 22, 2011 |
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Solacers tells the touching story of a boy's search for family life and safety following the divorce of his parents in Iran during the 1960s. The first child of a heartless father and a discarded mother is left to fend for himself on the streets of Mashhad, seeking food and shelter wherever he can. His lonely early years are an unbelievable tale of cruelty and betrayal on the part of nearly everyone who might be expected to help, save for one aunt who does her best to keep him from starving. But living a harsh and solitary existence has one advantage for this little boy: other than forcing him to be self-reliant, no one attempts to indoctrinate him on rural Iranian society's archaic cultural values and religious beliefs. And so he never accepts his wretched state as fate, choosing instead to dream big dreams about getting an education, having his own family, and starting a new life-possibly in the faraway land called America. He makes a plan and by the age of seventeen he boards a plane to the land of possibilities, where his dreams eventually also take flight.

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