Dina Nayeri (original) (raw)

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Iranian-American writer

Dina Nayeri
Born 1979[_citation needed_]Isfahan, Iran
Occupation Novelist
Nationality Iranian American French
Education Princeton University (BA)Harvard University (MEd, MBA)Iowa Writers' Workshop (MFA)
Genre Literary fiction, Creative non-fiction
Notable works A Teaspoon of Earth and Sea (2013)Refuge (2017)The Ungrateful Refugee (2019)
Relatives Daniel Nayeri
Website
www.dinanayeri.com

Dina Nayeri (born 1979) is an Iranian-American novelist, essayist, memoirist, and short story writer. She wrote the novels A Teaspoon of Earth and Sea (2014) and Refuge (2017) and the creative nonfiction books: The Ungrateful Refugee (2019), The Waiting Place (2020), and Who Gets Believed (2023).

Early life and education

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Nayeri was born in Isfahan, Iran. Her mother was a doctor and her father a dentist. She spent the first 8 years of her life in Isfahan but left Iran with her mother and brother Daniel in 1988 because her mother had converted to Christianity and the moral police of the republic had threatened her with execution.[1] Nayeri, her mother and brother spent two years in Dubai and Rome as asylum seekers and eventually settled in Oklahoma, in the United States.[2] Her father remained in Iran, where he still lives.

Nayeri holds a Bachelor of Arts from Princeton University and a Master of Education and MBA from Harvard University.[3] She also holds an MFA from the Iowa Writers' Workshop.

Nayeri's first novel, A Teaspoon of Earth and Sea, was published in 2014 by Riverhead Books (Penguin) and translated into 14 languages.

Her second novel, Refuge, was published in 2017, also by Riverhead Books. Refuge is a semi-autobiographical novel whose chapters are written alternately from the point of view of Niloo Hamidi, an Iranian woman who emigrated to the United States and, at the time of the novel, is teaching anthropology at a university in Amsterdam, and Bahman Hamidi, her father, a dentist and oral surgeon living in Isfahan, Iran. Niloo's chapters relating her current life in the Netherlands are in the third person, as are Bahman's chapters, while flashback chapters about Niloo's four visits with her father in four different cities are narrated in the first person by Niloo.

The novel is partly about a father-daughter relationship and partly about the refugee crisis that is affecting all of Europe, with particular focus on the Iranian refugee community in Netherlands.

When Niloo was forced to leave Iran with her mother and brothers, her father stayed behind. Niloo, who had a deep and joyous bond with her baba, was shocked by this and expected that he would join then. Bahman, however, went on to remarry, first a peasant woman with a young daughter, then, after divorcing her, a young and attractive woman. The novel starts with Bahman waiting for an audience with a divorce judge, a cleric, to obtain a divorce from his third wife. Bahman's third divorce constitutes the plot line of the chapters about present-day Bahman.

As attested by a personal essay[4] published in The New Yorker, many of Niloo's circumstances and adventures, including the four visits with her father, are modeled closely on real events in the author's life. Unlike the author's real-life brother, Niloo's brother Kian is a chef (the New Yorker article indicates that the author's real-life brother is a businessman) and is not married. There is no mention of his having a romantic interest.

Upon reaching the United States Nayeri lived as a refugee, "in refugee hostels," for a number of years.[2] When she was 15, in 1994, she became an American citizen, alongside her mother and brother. In 2001 she graduated from Princeton. In 2003 she married Philip Viergutz, a French citizen. She worked in New York City as a strategy consultant at McKinsey & Company and later as a strategic manager at Saks Fifth Avenue. She lived for some years in Amsterdam with her husband.

She had been living in London since 2015, but now lives in Scotland.[5] She has a daughter and is divorced from her husband.[6][7]

  1. ^ Dina Nayeri, "The Ungrateful Refugee: 'We Have No Debt to Repay'." The Guardian, 4 April 2017.
  2. ^ a b Dina Nayeri, "My Father, in Four Visits over Thirty Years." New Yorker, 18 June 2017.
  3. ^ Dina Nayeri's website, dinanayeri.com, retrieved 5 January 2018
  4. ^ "My Father, in Four Visits over Thirty Years". The New Yorker. 18 June 2017.
  5. ^ "Emotional Baggage: Dina Nayeri". 2022-03-13.
  6. ^ Nayeri, Dina (2016-10-14). "My Divorce, My Father, My Mistake". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-12-25.
  7. ^ "A Literal Hell Constructed for Children: Dina Nayeri on Family Separation". Literary Hub. 2018-07-11. Retrieved 2021-12-25.
  8. ^ "Spring anthology news". thesouthernreview.org. March 28, 2018. Archived from the original on 2018-04-06. Retrieved 2021-12-25.
  9. ^ "Dina Nayeri named 2018 Paul Engle Prize winner ・ Iowa City UNESCO City of Literature". Iowa City UNESCO City of Literature. 2018-06-27. Retrieved 2021-12-25.
  10. ^ "Die Preisträgerin 2020". Geschwister Scholl Preis (in German). Archived from the original on 2021-01-19. Retrieved 2021-12-25.
  11. ^ "The National Book Critics Circle Awards". National Book Critics Circle. Retrieved June 18, 2024.