Guided by religion and traditions, and respecting his father while longing for his mother’s love, Sohrab is a tribute to cultural legacy, an everyday hero who breathes virtue and sincerity, even as his world is consumed by the international powers vying for control of Iran’s natural resources. That dichotomy echoes in Haddad’s portrait of an Iran straining against its past as it reaches for the future, coming to terms with its worldly transformation while balancing ancient beliefs and customs. Sohrab’s journey encompasses not just Iran’s occupation but also the persecution of Jews, the devastation of a military invasion on his doorstep, and the beauty of found family—his brother, Arash, along with his German wife, Krista—that bathes the story in cross-cultural harmony and innocence during a time when the streets whispered suspicion at every turn.
The book’s title—pulled from an editorial cartoon depicting two beasts toying with a weaker one—serves as a chilling metaphor for the manipulation and control plaguing Sohrab’s country. As that reality unfolds, and Sohrab grasps the loss of his innocence, Haddad captures his confusion with precision, reshaping Sohrab’s simple journey into a harrowing adventure of loss, love, and bravery.
Takeaway: Thoughtful portrayal of Iran during its World War II occupation.
Comparable Titles: Anthony Doerr’s All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr, Parinoush Saniee’s The Book of Fate.
Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: B+
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A-