
“Dowlatabadi draws a detailed, realist picture of Iranian life . . . in language that is complex and lyrical.” — The Financial Times In the midst of the Iran–Iraq War, an Iraqi journalist is given a tour of a military prison. The Major in charge of the camp informs the writer of what is he is to write a fabricated report about a murder that has occurred in the camp, with the aim of demoralizing Iranian soldiers. Reluctant to write the report, the writer spends a long night talking and drinking with the Major and detailing a work of fiction he is composing about a group of soldiers trapped on a hill, dying of thirst as they battle for a water tank with a group of enemy soldiers perched on the opposite hill. The tank remains undamaged, but neither group has a hope of reaching it without being killed. In a narrative riddled with surreal images, shifting perspectives, and dark humor, Mahmoud Dowlatabadi—widely acknowledged as the most important living Iranian writer—offers a kaleidoscopic portrait of the warring countries as he questions the meaning of national identity and does something that has been nearly impossible to do in Iran for the last tell a true story.
Author

Mahmoud Dowlatabadi is an Iranian writer and actor, known for his promotion of social and artistic freedom in contemporary Iran and his realist depictions of rural life, drawn from personal experience. برنده لوح زرین بیست سال داستاننویسی بر کلیه آثار، به همراه امین فقیری ۱۳۷۶ دریافت جایزه یک عمر فعالیت فرهنگی، بدر نخستین دوره جایزه ادبی یلدا به همت انتشارات کاروان و انتشارات اندیشه سازان ۱۳۸۲ برنده جایزه ادبی واو ۱۳۹۰ Award for International Literature at the House of Cultures in Berlin 2009 Nominated Asian Literary Award for the novel Collon Collin 2011 Nominated for Man Booker International prize 2011 برنده جایزه ادبی هوشنگ گلشیری برای یک عمر فعالیت ۲۰۱۲ English translation of Colonel's novel, translated by Tom Petrodill, nominee for the best translation book in America 2013 Winner of the Literary Prize Ian Millski Switzerland 2013 Knight of the Art and Literature of France 2014