Bachtyar Ali

The Last Pomegranate Tree Diwahemîn henary dûnya - First Archipelago Books edition - 315 p., 18 cm

""Whenever he told lies, the birds would fly away. It had been that way since he was a child. Whenever he told a lie, something strange would happen." So begins Bachtyar Ali's The Last Pomegranate, a phantasmagoric warren of fact, fabrication, and mystical allegory, set in the aftermath of Saddam Hussein's rule and Iraq's Kurdish conflict. Muzafar-i Subhdam, a peshmerga fighter, has spent the last twenty-one years imprisoned in a desert yearning for his son, Saryas, who was only a few days old when Muzafar was captured. Upon his release, Muzafar begins a frantic search, only to learn that Saryas was one of three identical boys who became enmeshed in each other's lives as war mutilated the region"--


In English, translated from Kurdish.

9781953861405


Kurdish literature--Novel
Fathers and sons--Fiction
Missing children--Fiction


Kurdistan--Fiction
Iraq--History--21st century--Fiction