By Daniel Nayeri
Montclair, NJ: Levine Querido, 2025. Historical fiction. 181 pgs.
In 1941 Iran, 13-year-old Babak will do anything to stay with his younger sister Sana, who is 8. After their father is killed during the Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran, the siblings are left orphaned and Babak takes over guardianship to prevent the two from being separated. Carrying his father's blackboard on his back, Babak and Sana set off from Isfahan to find the nomadic tribes as they make their yearly trek across the mountains. Along the way, they encounter a suspicious man named Vulf, a friendly Englishman with a name that means cabbage, and a Jewish boy named Ben who has Vulf hot on his heels.
As he is known for doing, Daniel Nayeri weaves a highly readable adventure with threads of philosophy about God, the ties of family, and musings about how cultures can reconcile across differences. The setting of this novel is ingeniously unique, and a lengthy author's note at the end of the book explains how a neutral nation, separated from the main theaters of war, still became embroiled in the conflict. Like The Inquisitor's Tale from Adam Gidwitz, this rich historical adventure is filled with a nuanced discussion of how children can understand the cultural and religious categorization that defines us.

Comments