Maryam Tabibzadeh was born In Darab, Pars in Persia
(Iran) . She earned her masters
degree from Shiraz University and moved to the U.S., where she
attended graduate school at SUNY Binghamton. Ms. Tabibzadeh has been
writing and publishing stories and poems in her native Persian for
more than 20 years. She currently resides in Raleigh, NC.
Maryam has always been a source of pride and admiration due to her
social progressiveness, her educational achievements in Iran as well
as in the US, her professional accomplishments, and most of all in
her parenthood for raising two beautiful children.
Maryam left a lasting impression when I met her closely in our home
in Shiraz for the first time when I was 13. Since then, I have
always admired her spirit from close and afar, and have appreciated
her commitment to keeping in touch with the family.
PageOneLit.com:
Where did you grow up and was reading and writing a part of your
life? Who were your earliest influences and why?
Maryam Tabibzadeh:
grow up in the city of Darab in the province of Fars in today's
Iran. Yes, reading was my first love in life. I had inherited
the love of reading and writing from my father. Both of my
parents were good readers and good examples to follow. My father
subscribed all the available weekly magazines and my parents
read them often.
PageOneLit.com: Why do you write?
Maryam
Tabibzadeh: I love to
write. You wake up in the middle of the night and have some
thing in your chest and nothing calms you down but writing about
it.
PageOneLit.com: Who and/or what have been your biggest
influences with regard to your writing and why?
Maryam
Tabibzadeh: I give the
credit to both my father, whose hand writing and composition was
the talk of his friends, and my Uncle, whose poems were
published in Iran's weekly magazines. My father and my uncle
worked with me on my writings, I remember distinctly one day
when I was submerged in one of the novels I was reading, that my
father told me you can create the same novel If you want to one
day. I was eleven at the time. I thought about it and then I
started writing my first short story and took it to my school. I
was so pleased to see my school mates read it and passed it
along. That was the beginning of my writing. Ironically a
generation later I got the same bout of encouragement from a
close family member. I was shy to write anything in English
since it is my second language. But my daughter, Sheila
Mahoutchian, gave me the courage to write, and she inspired the
creation of this book. She painted a picture of the day my book
would be published and asked me how I felt about it, as if it
really happened. This inspiration was what stirred the creation
of "Persian Dreams"
PageOneLit.com: Tell us about
"Persian Dreams."
Maryam Tabibzadeh:
Like American Gone
with the Wind and Russian’s War and Peace;Persian Dreams
combines the sweetness of romance with the bitterness of
revelation and war. This story is told from the unique
perspective of a woman between lands. It shows the inward nature
and inside perspectives of the people of Iran, specifically the
women, leading up to and directly after the revolution of 1978.
This perspective is unique because we usually get a picture of
this from the outside, from the American or foreign point of
view, but here we see the situation from the inside. The
historic lesson is only further enhanced by the sweet romantic
events of a family through three generations.
Based on mostly autobiographical
events, this novel is both sweetly nostalgic and simultaneous
educational. It opens the door to the inner workings of Iranians
and their history, even while giving us pretty images and poetry
to dance on the frames of our minds. Its
uniqueness lays in this duality.
PageOneLit.com:
Where did the influence come from to write this book?
Maryam
Tabibzadeh:
The story was always in my mind. I lived through it, I had
friends that lived through this, and I often listened to my
father's and grandmother generation's stories of the times that
they lived through. This is the story of Iranian's last 100
years, and what it has lived through to get to where it is now.
My idea was that if there was a way to record it, in the way of
a story, I could reach both the younger generation of Iranians
in America, and Americans themselves to educate them somehow on
where we have come from and what has led up to the current
situation.
PageOneLit.com: In "Persian Dreams" your plot spans
one generation to the next. As one reviewer says, 'Persian
Dreams ' "...offers great insights into the lives of women in
this society and how the changes in the political climate have
affected women's lives and roles over the years." How much
research did you have to do regarding Persia/Iran history to
write
"Persian Dreams"? How did you research?
Maryam Tabibzadeh:
The study of
history always attracted me and all my years of living I am
reading historical events. My home land history is very long and
tumultuous. I
was reading frantically all the books I could find for the last
100 years. I also have read many different books which were
written during and after the revolution. My life in Iran and the
two research papers I wrote while I was a student in Pahlavi
University all contributed to this work. I also read and
translated several poems from the Persian Language and tailored
them to this book. It took me three years of research and
writing.
PageOneLit.com: What did you as the writer learn from
writing "Persian Dreams?"
Maryam Tabibzadeh:
Two things: That the first page is important and you must
find the right publisher. It does not matter if you write a
great story but it does matter if you have a great agent. I
also learn that there is much to writing a book besides
research, and writing. Promotions are the fun part.
PageOneLit.com: In "Persian Dreams"
your plot covers a culture that has gone through changes,
but the past continues to inform the present. Discuss these
changes and the unchanging of cultural practices
Maryam Tabibzadeh:
The women gained
the rights to vote and wear what they like. The arrival of the
modern schools and the opportunity for women to work in the work
place about 50 years ago in the Iran's traditional culture and
then again the arrivals of revolution and the changes in the
modern society created by the last ruler all contributed to the
change in the cultural practices.
I felt it was necessary to show
the multitude of views on the matters that shook the nation
through some of the most important times leading up to and
directly after the Revolution. I wanted to show that Iran is not
as one-dimensional as people like to think. No country is
really. Especially during a period of political unrest, many
varying view points exist around what is happening during these
tumultuous times. The differences in characters show us all the
different experiences that were present throughout these times.
The characters express experiences that women underwent,
characters that men had to deal with, that young people had to
deal with, in regard to all the pride of their parents and the
culture of their people. The characters themselves tell a story
that has long gone untold.
PageOneLit.com: Discuss the women in "Persian Dreams" and
how they must struggle to find their place in Islam but still be
free to find/follow their own dreams.
Maryam Tabibzadeh: It
depends on the woman's dreams and the country in which they are
living. For Noosha, she was able to
achieve her dreams and have a place in a Islamic country since
her dreams was to continue her higher education and earn her
living by working. This is not against Islam so there was no
contradiction between the two. However if a woman's dream is to
be equal to men which Islam obviously prohibits then there is no
way to have both. I can not wear what I like to wear as a woman
and have a place in Islam it is impossible. Of course, there are
so many different issues which have the same nature.
PageOneLit.com: "Persian Dreams" is 'well paced' Which
part of the writing process do you have the most difficulty
-- Plot or Character?
Maryam Tabibzadeh: I
think the plot was the hardest part. I did not know to choose
the plot style similar to the fairy tales as Old Persian way of
writing or write the events as a flashback. Finally I chose the
fairy tale to go with the name.
PageOneLit.com: What do you hope readers walk away with
after reading “Persian Dreams" ?
Maryam
Tabibzadeh: I
hope that they will be enchanted. The story carries along in
that meandering way that folklore storytellers are famous for,
the images and characters have a cinema graphic quality to them.
One feels uplifted by the victories and crushed by the terrible
circumstances and drama that the characters undergo. We share
their pain and anxieties, we identify with their various
situations.
In short, I believe that readers
will be quite touched by the simple and honest language of this
endearing tale of trial and tribulation of a people under a
shifting and unsteady political landscape.
PageOneLit.com: "Persian Dreams" would make a great film
-- Anything in the works? Who in Hollywood would you select to
play your characters?
Maryam Tabibzadeh:
Not yet. I think Susan Sarandon and Sam Sheppard would be
good candidates or Indeed I’ve
thought a great deal about the actors who would play the major
roles. I have given this much thought. Here are my suggestions:
John Robis Annette
Benning, Sir William—Kevin Bacon,
Master Weaver Isaac—Peter Falk, Lady Rosalie—Isabella
Rossellini, Dr. Evelyn Thayer—Sigourney Weaver,
The Fool—Danny
Devito, Sir Clarence Dudley—John Lithgow, Sister Agatha—Kathy
Bates, Sir Jeremiah Huff—Morgan Freeman, Archbishop Claude—Ron
Perlman, Troubadour—Johnny Depp,
Seer Delphine—Cloris
Leachman.
PageOneLit.com: You have written short stories and poems
as well -- Is there a literary genre/form you prefer? As
a writer/author discuss each form
Poetry -Short Story - Novel from your point of view and what
each form gives back to you - Is there one genre you enjoy than
the other? Why or Why not?
Maryam Tabibzadeh:
I think poetry is
harder to write than short stories or the novel. I can write
them only when I am feeling a deep passion for something very
important in my life, however poetry and short story are one
dimensional and it is written quickly and often does not need
any research. For Novel you need to have some knowledge and some
information about your subject to write about. Yes, I prefer a
short story. This gives my diverse idea a chance to wonder
around. It is quick. I see or feel something and that is enough
to write them in the form of short story. Short stories also
does not need the intense feeling the poetry need to have so it
gets created easily and effortlessly.
PageOneLit.com:
What's next?
Maryam Tabibzadeh:
I have hundred ideas and am working on them. One is the
work of a great poet that I love and like to translate his poems
into English. The other is another Novel which is about a
western woman in the west with traditional ideas and her
reaction to her children's choices of homosexuality and
interracial marriage. I have the idea and doing research on it.
PageOneLit.com:
What was the last book you read?
Maryam Tabibzadeh:
I read a lot but
the last books were Dan Brown's
Da vinci
Code to see what made this book so popular. I also read
Shirin
Ebadi's
Iran Awakening
PageOneLit.com: Do you have any hobbies? What are they?
How do they enhance your writing?
Maryam
Tabibzadeh:
Beside writing I love
reading and gardening.
Reading gives me the scope and information for my mind to
develop my new writing projects and gardening is a tool to
purify my soul and make me ready to write.