Mazdak Z’s Memoir Reveals the Human Story Behind Iran’s Political Upheaval
ORLANDO, FL, UNITED STATES, March 12, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — When Mazdak Z was growing up in Tehran, his father Karim would tell him stories. Not the sanitized versions you find in history books, but the lived, breathing accounts of a man watching his nation transform before his eyes. Those conversations, those memories, those moments of connection across a kitchen table now form the heart of A Glimpse of Iran, a deeply personal yet sweeping exploration of what it means to live through history rather than simply study it.
This is not a political manifesto. It is not a policy analysis or a theoretical treatise on the Islamic Revolution. Instead, Mazdak Z has written something more valuable: an intimate portrait of his family caught in the crosscurrents of one of the 20th century’s most consequential upheavals.
The story centers on two people: Karim, a devout officer whose faith in his country’s direction slowly eroded as he watched the nation’s course shift; and Lily, whose strength became the quiet anchor holding everything together. Their lives stretch across decades of transformation. They witnessed Iran’s flirtation with modernization under the Shah, the idealism and chaos of revolution, the settling into a new political order, and the long, disorienting aftermath. They knew exile. They knew longing. They knew what it felt like to watch the place you called home become strange to you, even as it remained indelible in your heart.
What makes Mazdak Z’s work distinctive is how he refuses to separate the personal from the political. A family dinner becomes a moment to understand the tensions that defined an era. A conversation about faith becomes a window into a nation’s spiritual reckoning. His father’s disillusionment mirrors Iran’s own search for truth and direction. His mother’s endurance illuminates the quiet heroism of Iranian women navigating loss, displacement, and change.
Mazdak Z traces this journey with the precision of a historian and the emotional clarity of a memoirist. He moves between the grand historical moments we think we know, the White Revolution, the 1979 upheaval, the nuclear standoffs and the small, devastating moments of daily life. A forced separation. A letter that arrives too late. The weight of memory. The ache of nostalgia for a place that no longer exists, if it ever existed at all.
The book is structured as both narrative and reflection. We follow Karim’s evolution from believer to skeptic to prisoner, and in doing so, we understand something about what the Revolution demanded of its people: a reckoning with identity, faith, and the very idea of home. We see Lily not as a supporting character but as a woman of agency and intelligence, navigating a patriarchal society with dignity and determination. And we see Mazdak Z himself, the child trying to make sense of parents who carried wounds he was only beginning to understand.
What emerges is a portrait of Iran that exists nowhere in the headlines. Not the Iran of geopolitical strategy or nuclear negotiations, though both appear in these pages. Instead, we meet the Iran of ordinary lives; families laughing, arguing, holding on to each other through storms. The Iran where poetry still matters, where faith and doubt coexist, where people love their country even as they grieve what it has become.
In an era when Iran is often reduced to caricature or abstraction in Western discourse, Mazdak Z offers something radical: humanity. His parents are not symbols. They are people. Their struggle is not a political lesson, it is a human one and that distinction matters.
The book also serves as a kind of corrective to the way we tell stories about the Middle East. There is no savior plot here, no simple heroes and villains. Instead, there are people making impossible choices, holding onto dignity in circumstances that threaten to strip it away, finding moments of grace in fractured lives. This is the texture of real experience, rarely captured in conventional accounts of revolution and political change.
For anyone seeking to understand Iran beyond the headlines; its history, its culture, its contemporary struggles and aspirations, this book is indispensable.
A Glimpse of Iran ultimately asks a profound question: What does it mean to belong to a place that belongs to history? Mazdak Z’s answer, told through the lives of his parents and his own reflections, is nuanced, moving, and unforgettable.
The book is available now in all formats at https://a.co/d/3Cdcghq
About the Author
Mazdak Z is a writer and cultural commentator with deep roots in Iranian history and society. Drawing on his family’s lived experience of Iran’s modern transformation, he brings both scholarly rigor and personal intimacy to his examination of culture, politics, and belonging.
For media inquiries, interviews, or speaking engagements, please contact
Mazdak Z
Parker Publishers
contact@parkerpublishers.com
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