![]() ![]() In the second installment, forthcoming in our Summer 2006 issue, we will see the same story again-but in a much different light, with many new details revealed.įor Satrapi, who was born in Rasht, Iran, and grew up in the last years of pre-revolution Tehran, this is a deeply personal fable. He takes to his bed, renouncing the world and all of its pleasures. ![]() His tar, the instrument he played and loved for all his adult life, has been broken, and none of the replacements he tries is adequate. The first version of events, presented in our Spring 2006 issue, traces Nasser Ali Khan, one of Iran’s most celebrated tar players, on his search for a new instrument. Marjane Satrapi’s Chicken with Plums is a classic twice-told tale. ![]()
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