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In the Time of Our History

“I fell in love with this jewel of a novel from the first page. It’s a universal tale that naturally leads to self-reflection and conversations about the changing relationship between mothers and daughters, and the choices we make, good and bad, early in life and late, which determine our identity.”

Amy Tan, author of THE JOY LUCK CLUB

About Susanne

Susanne Pari is a novelist, book reviewer, essayist, and interviewer. Her most recent novel, In the Time of Our History, examines the entangled lives of an Iranian American family grappling with generational culture clashes and the rebellion of its women. It was an IndieNext Pick, a Target Book Club Pick, a 2023 Women’s National Book Association Group Reads Selection, a Book Browse 2023 Best Books Selection, and a Hoopla Spotlight Selection. Her first novel, The Fortune Catcher, about the aftermath of the Iranian Revolution, was first published in 1997 and translated into six languages. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Boston Globe, The San Francisco Chronicle, and NPR. She is a member of the National Book Critics Circle, PEN America, the Author’s Guild, and the San Francisco Writers’ Grotto. She divides her time between Northern California and New York.

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In a powerful novel that is at once a multi-generational Iranian-American saga and an intimate, moving story of mothers and daughters, Susanne Pari explores the entangled lives of the Jahani family, exiled and forging new lives in an America on the cusp of upheaval.

Twelve months after her younger sister Anahita’s death, Mitra Jahani reluctantly returns to her family’s home in suburban New Jersey to observe the Iranian custom of “The One Year.” Mitra has spent her adult life liberating herself from such traditions. She doesn’t need to gather with gossipy relatives over fragrant saffron rice pudding and eggplant khoresh to remember and grieve for Ana. Her sister, as dutiful and sweet as Mitra was rebellious, is always in her heart, and so is the guilt that Mitra can neither reveal nor assuage.

For Mitra’s mother, Shireen, this homecoming is both joyful and fraught. Shireen’s husband rose to the role of family patriarch despite humble beginnings and he relishes that power, though not the responsibilities that come with it. His callous disowning of his surviving daughter compels Shireen to rethink her own role after decades of submission.

But Mitra too is suddenly forced to confront the truth about her late sister’s life, and the secrets that each of them hid to protect others. And as revelations bring Mitra and Shireen to a new understanding, they, along with the rest of the Jahani family, must consider anew the choices, bargains, and betrayals made in the name of belonging.