Amir Hassan Cheheltan

Amir Hassan Cheheltan (Persian: امیرحسن چهل‌تن); (1956-) is an Iranian writer. He has published 12 novels, 6 volumes of short stories and a screenplay of which some are banned in Iran and many of them are translated into English, German, Italian, Norwegian, Lithuanian, Arabic and Hebrew.

Life

Cheheltan was born in Tehran in 1956 to parents with a interest in classical Persian literature.[1] After graduating from a mathematics high school, he studied electrical engineering and after the Iranian Revolution of 1979, he left Iran for Great Britain to keep studying.[1] After his studies he served in the military during the Iran Iraq war.[2]

Literary career

His first work was a collection of stories, Sigheh (Temporary Wife), which was released in 1976. Later he wrote his first novel, The Mourning of Qassem, that was only to be published until in 2003, twenty years after it was completed.[1] Due to a difficult situation for the countries intellectuals, he fled Iran in 1999 and only returned two years later.[2] He has been an guest at the International Literature Festival of Berlin for several years[1] and his essays have been published in German newspapers such as the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung and Süddeutsche Zeitung.[3][4] He has received scholarships from the German Heinrich Böll Foundation, the Ledig House in Belgium[1] or the Villa Aurora in California.[2]

Works

novels

  • The Mourning of Qassem, Now, Tehran 1984
  • Hall of Mirrors, Beh-negar, Tehran, 1991
  • Tehran, City without Sky, Negah, Tehran, 2002
  • Love and the Incomplete Woman, Negah, Tehran, 2003.
  • Iranian Dawn, Negah, Tehran, 2005
  • Tehran, Revolution Street, Kirchheim, München, 2009
  • American Killing in Tehran, C.H. Beck , München, 2011
  • The Calligrapher of Isfahan, C.H. Beck , München, 2015
  • The Persistent Parrot, Matthes & Seitz, Berlin, 2018
  • The Circle of Literature Lovers, C.H. Beck , München, 2020
  • A love in Cairo, C.H. Beck , München, 2022[5]

short stories

  • Temporary Wife, Bu-ali, Tehran, 1976
  • Relic-cloth on the Shrine's Steel Grillwork, Rawagh, Tehran, 1978
  • No One Called me Anymore, Negah, Tehran, 1993
  • Not Long remains till Tomorrow, Negah, Tehran, 1998
  • Five O'clock is too Late to Die, Negah, Tehran, 2002
  • Several Unbelievable Truths, Negah, Tehran, 2017[6]

Awards

References

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