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Faith and Moonlight by Mark Gelineau
Faith and Moonlight by Mark Gelineau





Faith and Moonlight by Mark Gelineau

Similar to one of my favorite multigenerational books, The Beauty Queen of Jerusalem, this reads starts off on a prominent related cast of female characters with a hint of otherworldliness in their everyday life. I was keen on finding a read with hints of magical realism in it, when I came across this wonder of a book centered on just that, with the added bonus of featuring the Jewish ghetto of Tehran. She lives in Los Angeles, where she’s at work on a new novel. Nahai holds a BA and a Master’s degree in International Relations from UCLA, and an MFA in Creative Writing from USC. A judge for the Los Angeles Times Book Awards (Fiction, First Fiction), she has lectured at a number of conferences nationwide, and served on the boards of PEN Center USA West, The International Women’s Media Foundation, and B’nai Zion Western Region. Nahai is a frequent lecturer on the contemporary politics of the Middle East, has been a guest on PBS, CNBC, as well as a number of local television and radio news programs, and has guest-hosted on NPR affiliate KCRW ( The Politics of Culture). Times bestseller, was named “One of the Best Books of the Year” by the Chicago Tribune, and won the Persian Heritage Foundation’s Award. Times bestseller and a “Best Book of the Year.” Her fourth novel, Caspian Rain was published in September ‘07, was also an L.A. Her third novel, Sunday’s Silence (Harcourt, 2001), was also an L.A. Times bestseller, it was named as “One of the Best Books of the Year” by the Los Angeles Times. Her second novel, Moonlight on the Avenue of Faith (Harcourt, 1999), was a finalist for the Orange Prize in England, the IMPAC award in Dublin, and the Harold J.

Faith and Moonlight by Mark Gelineau

It won the Los Angeles Arts Council Award for Fiction.

Faith and Moonlight by Mark Gelineau

Nahai’s first novel, Cry of the Peacock (Crown, 1992) told, for the first time in any Western language, the 3,000-year story of the Jewish people of Iran. She writes a monthly column for the The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles, for which she has been twice a finalist for an L.A. Her writings have appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, San Francisco Chronicle, Los Angeles Magazine, and Huffington Post. She is the winner of the Los Angeles Arts Council Award, the Persian Heritage Foundation’s Award, the Simon Rockower Award, and the Phi Kappa Phi Award.

Faith and Moonlight by Mark Gelineau

They have been finalists for the Orange Award, the IMPAC Award, and the Harold J. Her novels have been translated into 18 languages, and have been selected as “One of the Best Books of the Year” by the Los Angeles Times and the Chicago Tribune. Nahai is a best-selling author, and a professor of Creative Writing at USC.







Faith and Moonlight by Mark Gelineau