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Then they came for me a family's story of love, captivity, and survival  Cover Image E-audiobook E-audiobook

Then they came for me a family's story of love, captivity, and survival

Bahari, Maziar (Author). Hoye, Stephen. (Narrator). Molloy, Aimee. (Added Author). Tantor Media (Added Author).

Summary: A riveting, heart-wrenching memoir of Maziar Bahari's brutal interrogation in Iran's most notorious prison, offering insight into Iran's turbulent recent past and uncertain future.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781452622873 (electronic audio bk.)
  • ISBN: 1452622876 (electronic audio bk.)
  • Physical Description: electronic resource
    remote
    1 online resource (1 sound file (11 hr.))
  • Publisher: [Old Saybrook, Conn.] : Tantor Media, 2011.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Unabridged.
Audio file.
Title from image on Web page (viewed June 7, 2011).
Previously released on compact disc, 2011.
Participant or Performer Note: Narrator: Stephen Hoye.
Target Audience Note:
General adult.
Subject: Bahari, Maziar
Bahari, Maziar -- Imprisonment
Bahari, Maziar -- Family
Iran -- History -- 1997- -- Biography
Iran -- Politics and government -- 1997-
Political prisoners -- Iran -- Biography
Journalists -- Iran -- Biography
Journalists -- Canada -- Biography
Motion picture producers and directors -- Canada -- Biography
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY -- Personal Memoirs
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY -- General
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- General
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Penology
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY -- Social Scientists & Psychologists
Genre: Downloadable audio books.
Audiobooks.

Electronic resources


  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2011 May #2

    This harrowing memoir provides an illuminating glimpse into the security apparatus of one of the world's most repressive countries.

    The elections of 2009 led to the largest street protests in Iran since the fall of the Shah, and the establishment responded by arresting and torturing thousands of the participants. With the assistance of Molloy (co-author: Jantsen's Gift, 2009, etc.), Newsweek correspondent Bahari details his incarceration at the hands of the Revolutionary Guards in Teheran's notorious Evin prison. Because both his father and sister spent years in Iranian prisons for their political activism, Bahari was better prepared for his ordeal than most people, but the reality was shocking even to him. He learned from his interrogator, a man he knew only as "Rosewater" due to his overpowering perfume, that the Islamic Republic believed he was an American spy and one of the chief instigators of the protests. The key piece of evidence against him was an interview he once gave to a correspondent from the Daily Show with John Stewart, who was dressed as a spy and who introduced him by saying, "He goes by the code name Pistachio." Rosewater also presented him with the damning evidence of his membership in a Pauly Shore fan club on Facebook, and that he had traveled to New Jersey. Much of the book concerns the psychological impact of imprisonment and separation from loved ones, and Bahari draws upon the strength of his relatives to survive. While contemplating suicide, he imagined his father telling him, "You shouldn't do their jobs for them. If they want to kill you, they can easily do it themselves."

    Especially timely given recent events throughout the Middle East, this book is recommended for anyone wishing to better understand the workings of a police state.

     

    Copyright Kirkus 2011 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • PW Annex Reviews : Publishers Weekly Annex Reviews

    In this book, Newsweek correspondent and documentary filmmaker Bahari effectively and systematically details his time in Evin Prison in Tehran, and his interrogation by members of the Revolutionary Guards. Bahari was jailed in June 2009 following the disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. In poignant passages, Bahari draws parallels between his experiences and those of other family members. His father had been jailed under the Shah in the 1950s; his sister, Maryam, under Ayatollah Khomeini in the 1980s. Bahari relies on stories he heard from them, as well as their strength, to survive solitary confinement. He also describes his relationship with his fiancée, Paola, in London and the impending birth of their daughter. His great desire to reunite with them fuels his struggles in Iran, and gives this sympathetic read added urgency. (June)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2010 PWxyz LLC
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