Prominent Iranian journalist and political activist, Houshang Asadi was used to being arrested. This time, however, was different. Little did he know in 1983 he would spend the next six years being brutally, mindlessly tortured by the very people he supported. Brother Hamid, Asadi's torturer, stopped at nothing to extract his 'confessions'. Asadi was a spy for Russia, for Britain, for anyone or anything. Hamid became an ambassador, Asadi a fugitive, haunted by nightmares and persisting pain. His feet lashed till lame, blindfolded, he was grilled until he could no longer phrase a simple question himself. Through these letters, Asadi recounts how his accidental friendship with a previous fellow prisoner, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, finally saved his life - and confronts his torturer one last time.
See more
Current price
€18.69
Original price
€21.99
Save 15%
Will deliver when available.
Product Details
Dimensions: 146 x 225mm
Publication Date: 01 Jun 2010
Publisher: Oneworld Publications
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781851687503
About Houshand Asadi
A journalist writer and translator Houshang Asadi was a member of both the Writers' Association of Iran and the Iranian Journalists' Syndicate and the co-founder of the Association of Iranian Film Critics and Script Writers. Prior to the Islamic Revolution he served for many years as Deputy Editor at Kayhan Iran's largest daily newspaper and was for twelve years the Editor-in-Chief of the country's largest-circulation film magazine Gozaresh. He is the author of several novels plays and film scripts and has translated into Persian important works by Gabriel Garcia Marquez Mario Vargas Llosa and T.S. Eliot. Shortly after the Islamic Revolution of 1979 and following the new government's crackdown on all opposition parties Asadi was arrested once again. He was kept in solitary confinement for almost two years and severely tortured until he falsely confessed to operating as a spy for the British and Russian governments. His sentence was death by hanging. In the end this was reduced to 15 years imprisonment. After 6 years he was freed and eventually escaped Iran in 2003. He now lives in exile in Paris with his wife where he co-founded the influential Persian-language news website Rooz Online.