Review of My Father’s House

My Father’s House My Father’s House
by Mina Javaherbin; illus. by Lindsey Yankey
Primary    Candlewick    32 pp.
11/24    9781536225532    $18.99

A little girl and her father explore his hometown of Isfahan in Iran. They visit the ruins of a fire temple at dawn and meet her father’s friend in his Jewish neighborhood, then meet up with another friend near the centuries-old Vank church. At the city center, the girl is awed by the grand palace and mosques and reflects on how the “lace-shaped windows” of the mosque mirror the arcs in the synagogue, church, and temple. They make their way to her father’s house, past the coppersmith’s bazaar, where her father laughingly recalls childhood antics. At home, they are greeted by his grandmother and his former nanny, who shares some freshly baked sangak bread. Later, they sit down for a winter’s meal of chicken and rice with walnut and pomegranate sauce before sleep and dreams take over. This nostalgic story is framed through Isfahan’s historical monuments and the interiors of the father’s house. The mixed-media illustrations are in a muted palette with bright pops of color—tiles, fabrics, household decorations. A glimpse into the rich architecture, cuisine, and interreligious history of Iran, this is also an ode to a cherished childhood and a shared past with people of different faiths. An author’s note makes personal connections; a glossary is also appended.

From the ">November/December 2024 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

sadaf-siddique

Sadaf Siddique is co-author of Muslims in Story: Expanding Multicultural Understanding through Children’s and Young Adult Literature and co-founder of Kitaabworld. She writes about Muslim kid lit and South Asian kid lit at Lantern Reads.

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