“In this stirring collection of essays, Khakpour explores her life as a writer and her American experience as an Iranian immigrant, touching on the personal and the political with equal grace.”
—USA Today
“A moving collection of personal essays centering the Iranian American and immigrant experience today.”
—Ms. Magazine, May 2020 Reads for the Rest of Us
“Spanning more than a decade, the Iranian-American novelist and memoirist reflects on assimilation and the burdens of being Middle Eastern in today’s America.”
—The New York Times Book Review
"Brown Album invites readers to participate in a literary funhouse cobbled from essays, yearning, unabashed weirdness, violence of all sizes, and historical memory. Its pages mirror the everyday tragicomedy lived by diaspora who are too femme, too queer, too smart, too brown, too difficult, and ultimately, too real to belong to the United States."
—Myriam Gurba, Bomb
“A collection that is by turns raw and wry, witty, and heartbreaking. Above all, it is a fearless reflection of an immigrant searching for home and for herself.”
—Ploughshares
“[Khakpour’s] work is much more expansive than the white literary imagination would have us believe, and this sharp collection of 23 essays is evidence of that.”
—Bitch Magazine, 13 Books Feminists Should Read in May
“Marked by her strong voice, relentless pursuit of honesty, and damnation of conventional narratives.”
—The Adroit Journal
“The marvelous essays in Khakpour’s collection blend together to form a memoir.... [Khakpour] writes with wit and charm.”
—The National Book Review
“This collection of essays by novelist Porochista Khakpour thoughtfully illustrates what it’s like to be caught between cultures. Brown Album, which compiles more than 10 years of Khakpour’s work, analyzes her identities as both an Iranian-American and as a writer. The pieces range in subject, from the process of writing a novel to the aftermath of President Trump’s election, but all provide fresh insight into one woman’s experience as an immigrant in the U.S.”
—Time, Books You Should Read in May
“Provocative pieces that detonate many notions of identity.”
—Kirkus, Best Books for May
"With a focus on race and ethnicity, Khakpour chronicles her gradual coming to terms with her Iranian familial history and delves into the anxiety of being brown skinned in America. Alternately conflicted and confident, excited and anxious, indulgent and exasperated, Khakpour engages with her complex Iranian American heritage with vibrancy and candor."
—Booklist, *starred*
"[Khakpour] documents her survival of white America as an Iranian American; yet, Khakpour seems to ask on every page: Is this all survival is?.... A triumphant entry in the personal essay canon."
—Library Journal, *starred*
"In this wonderful essay collection, novelist Khakpour (The Last Illusion) passionately adn wittily explores the writing life and the Iranian-American experience.... Passionate and enlightening."
—Publishers Weekly, *starred*
Incisive.... About which stories we chose to tell about ourselves, and about being brown in a country more blindingly white under Donald Trump.... Provocative pieces that detonate many notions of identity.”
—Kirkus Reviews, *starred*
“Confusing, exhilarating, terrifying, sad, scary, magical.... This book was balm to my Turkish-American soul, and to my cosmopolitan-writer-beyond-nationalism soul. Every page is overflowing with verve and insight and hilarity and brilliance and sadness and historical and cultural specificity. Porochista Khakpour is a treasure.”
—Elif Batuman, author of The Idiot
"Porochista Khakpour writes with incandescent gusto! This is an 'album' that masterfully makes use of a full array of styles--political analysis, pop and fashion appreciation, and personal essay. Brown Album is a vital and beautiful book for these days of ugly xenophobia and paranoia."
—Mona Eltahawy, author of The Seven Necessary Sins for Women and Girls
“The legendary Porochista Khakpour has created a rigorous, poetic and biting exploration of what it means to be brown, Iranian, female and American in a United States that has spent the last few decades putting these identities under siege."
—Molly Crabapple, author of Drawing Blood, Brothers of the Gun with Marwan Hisham
“Splendidly elegant.... A fluid collection of essays that reads like a memoir, it targets—with devastating precision—the internal conflicts, turmoil and sometime agony of being the ‘other’ in an America that has always been, and is perhaps more so today.”
—Hooman Majd, author of New York Times bestseller The Ayatollah Begs to Differ
“Brilliant.... What I love most about Porochista Khakpour's writing is her voice: always direct, always passionate, always clear and brave, full of compassion and vulnerability, always open to the world. Brown Album is both a manifesto of survival and a lyric journey.”
—Ilya Kaminsky, author of Deaf Republic and Dancing in Odessa