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A Hundred Sweet Promises

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

WINNER - 2023 AMERICAN FICTION AWARDS - Historical Fiction & Historical Romance

FINALIST - 2022 INTERNATIONAL BOOK AWARDS - Historical Fiction & Literary Fiction

SHORTLIST - 2022 HAWTHORNE PRIZE - Historical Fiction

2022 GOLD CATEGORY WINNER - Historical Audiobook

AS FEATURED ON NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO (NPR)


A family secret revealed 40 years ago by a grandmother to her grandson is now an acclaimed Russian historical fiction novel. "A Hundred Sweet Promises" is the tale of the author's grandfather, Nasrosoltan, a famed composer, who on the eve of World War I travels from Persia to Russia to study classical music at the St. Petersburg Conservatory with such masters as Rimsky-Korsakov. While there, Nasrosoltan falls in love with a Romanov princess, but the royalty surrounding him considers this a forbidden love. Unexpectedly, the Tsar gets involved, and Nasrosoltan suddenly finds himself in a battle between head and heart while being carried forward on a wave of destiny toward an uncertain future. A novel based on a true story set against the backdrop of the final days of Imperial Russia.


KIRKUS REVIEWS

"...An exceedingly intelligent tale that thoughtfully juxtaposes the maddening effects of romantic love with the violent paroxysms of political insurrection. Furthermore, the reader is given a rare literary treat: a peek into distinct revolutionary periods-Russia and Iran in the early years of the 20th century and Iran in the century's last quarter. A dramatically affecting novel that is also politically astute." - "Kirkus Reviews"


PUBLISHERS WEEKLY BOOK LIFE REVIEW

"....one of the peculiar pleasures of this novel is that its author seems deeply familiar with & fond of 19th century Russian literature; there are hints of Chekhov, of Tolstoy's "Kreutzer Sonata" and Pushkin's "The Queen of Spades." The narrative style evokes the writers of that period, and their influence is felt throughout the text. The novel is well-researched and convincingly recreates the pomp and glitter of St. Petersburg in the twilight of the Romanov empire. The story brings back how honor was an achievable ideal and nobility of character and behavior were the qualities sought after in a romantic hero and heroine. Nasrosoltan Minbashian is an appealing and vividly drawn romantic hero in his grandson's retelling of the ill-fated love between the Persian composer and the Russian princess ultimately wound up wed to Rasputin's assassin, Prince Felix Yusupov. Nasrosoltan's complex inner life and character are depicted with a sure hand."-"Publishers Weekly"


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sepehr Haddad's debut novel, "A Hundred Sweet Promises" is the winner of the 2023 American Fiction Awards in Historical Fiction & Historical Romance. The novel also received the 2022 HFC Gold Medal for Historical Audiobook. Sepehr is also a Universal Music Group (UMG) recording artist, with the Billboard chart-topping duo "Shahin & Sepehr."

For further information, visit: www.SepehrHaddad.com

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    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2021
      An ambitious Persian composer falls illicitly in love with the Russian princess he tutors in this novel based on a true story. Nasrollah Minbashian travels from Tehran, the city of his birth, to Russia with his father, Salar Moazaz, to study at the St. Petersburg Conservatory under the direction of renowned composer Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov. Nasrollah remains there for seven years, falls deeply in love with the city and its cosmopolitan culture, and regrets leaving when the time comes. Back at home, Nasrollah flourishes as a musician in Tehran and is appointed the director of a military band. The Persian king bestows on him the honorary title Nasrosoltan. Still, he pines to return to St. Petersburg and become a daring composer like Stravinsky, though his "domineering father" wants him to settle down and start a family. Nasrollah finally returns to Russia but gambles his way into dire financial straits, and he's compelled to take a job as piano tutor to Princess Irina Alexandrovna, the czar's niece. Nasrollah is unhappy with the assignment, but he eventually falls for Irina while realizing that their love is almost certainly doomed. Staying in St. Petersburg would be the fulfillment of a dream and probably torpedo his career. "You know it was always my dream to live and compose in this great city. But I now realize I will remain a nobody if I stay here, just a piano tutor to some. Even though I believe I am a worthy composer, there are hundreds of composers in this city who cannot make a living through their work." Haddad bases the novel on his own grandfather of the same name, relating a story he was told while in Tehran in 1978 in advance of Iran's Islamic Revolution. He astutely sets the drama of Nasrollah's love affair against both the tumult of his time and his grandfather's time; in the early 20th century, both Russia and Tehran were experiencing profound political discontent as calls for reform became increasingly urgent. Nasrollah is an enticingly complex character--musically gifted and deeply ambitious, even haughty, he learns a remarkable humility from the experience of lost love. In florid terms that flirt with melodrama, Haddad depicts his anguish: "Nasrosoltan's whole being felt pained, knowing full well there was no remedy: the pain that seems it will never depart the body, which is ever-present and relentless, like a thief, robbing the victim of sleep, appetite, and any joy or purpose." The novel, despite its brevity, unfolds far too slowly, and the prose ranges from unspectacular to overwrought. However, this remains an exceedingly intelligent tale that thoughtfully juxtaposes the maddening effects of romantic love with the violent paroxysms of political insurrection. Furthermore, the reader is given a rare literary treat: a peek into distinct revolutionary periods--Russia and Iran in the early years of the 20th century and Iran in the century's last quarter. A dramatically affecting novel that is also politically astute.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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