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The Blind Owl
The Blind Owl | Sadegh Hedayat
16 posts | 27 read | 26 to read
Recognized as the outstanding Iranian writer of the twentieth century, Sadegh Hedayat is credited with having brought his country's language and literature into the mainstream of contemporary writing. The Blind Owl, long considered a classic and often compared to the works of Poe, chillingly recreates the labyrinthine movements of a deranged mind. The young woman who haunts the narrator is first introduced as a stranger with jet-black hair and wide, haunting eyes. She creeps into the narrator's room but he realizes, upon touching her, that she is lifeless and cold. The narrator, a painter and opium addict, packs the woman's corpse into a suitcase and takes her to an remote spot along the banks of a river, where he buries her. Along the way he meets an old man with a spine-chilling laugh who becomes the first in a stream of recurring mental images: four cadaverous black horses with rasping coughs, a hidden urn of poisoned wine, a sheep butcher, and a small painting of a woman on the back of a pen-case soon follow. Through a series of intricately woven events that revolve around these images, the narrator is compelled to record his obsession with the woman even as it drives him further into madness. That the narrator is recording his confession for the sake of his shadow, which he thinks perfectly resembles an owl, only heightens the sense of terror: My shadow on the wall had become exactly like an owl and, leaning forward, read intently every word I wrote. The eerie images, and their repetition, obscure reality and twist and turn into themselves, disorienting the reader and mimicing the distress of the opium-addled narrator. The woman, at first a stranger, becomes the narrator's mother, and finally his wife. As the book winds to a close, the narrator is trapped in his room, so dissociated from reality that his shadow appears more real to him than he himself does. The narrator finally takes up his bone-handled butcher's knife (the same instrument he has seen the butcher wiping on the legs of sheep carcasses), and proceeds to the beautiful young woman's room. After she welcomes him in, he falls into or springs upon her, consumed by lust and hatred ([they] were twins. Her fresh, moonlight-pale body . . . opened and closed me within itself like a cobra coiling around its prey). In the confused, impassioned struggle that follows, the man sinks his knife into the young woman's side, killing her. Emitting a hollow, grating laugh, he staggers to a mirror only to find that his reflection is that of the old bearded man who has so long been haunting him. The book ends with the man looking out of his room to see the crouching figure of the old man disappearing into the mist, and looking down at his own chest to see maggots writing in the folds of his coat, and to feel the weight of the dead woman upon his chest.
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review
Bookwomble
Blind Owl | Sadeq Hedayat
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Pickpick

This absolutely unreliable narrator is a blend of that from Poe's "Tell-Tale Heart", Dostoevsky's Underground Man and Raskolnikov from "Crime and Punishment", and Meyrink's Pernath from "The Golem". He utterly objectifies his whole perceptual world: things have significance only in how they relate to him, and those relationships are a repetitive cycling of elements in varying but finite combinations.
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Bookwomble Death, sexual obsession, putrefaction, drug-induced psychosis, misogyny, murder, suicidal ideation, fractured space-time and a blurred melding of personal existences combine in an unsettling psychedelic effect.
I liked it 😁
On a tangential note, Hitler really did spoil the toothbrush moustache for the rest of us, didn't he?
14mo
Bookwomble @Suet624 Tagging so you can review your decision to stack. 👍or👎? 😁 14mo
Leftcoastzen That‘s a lot to unpack!😄 14mo
See All 11 Comments
Bookwomble @Leftcoastzen And in only 87 pages! 😳 14mo
vivastory Chaplin wore it better 😁 14mo
Suet624 Thank you! Definitely my speed. 14mo
Suet624 @vivastory haha. So true. 14mo
Bookwomble @vivastory And Ollie Hardy 😄 British comedian Richard Herring (fairly left wing) did a Hitler Moustache Tour a couple of years ago, for which he grew the same, and said it was a most uncomfortable experience! 14mo
Bookwomble @Suet624 Have at it, then! 😁👍 14mo
batsy That's great! All of my favourite references except The Golem which I haven't read, and now I think I should! 14mo
Bookwomble @batsy The Golem is similarly feverish and (intentionally and effectively) difficult to separate what's happening from what the MC perceives as happening. Some knowledge of alchemical and tarot symbolism helps with the deciphering which unless you're a practicing occultist as Meyrink was, we now have Wikipedia for 😊 14mo
40 likes1 stack add11 comments
quote
Bookwomble
Blind Owl | Sadeq Hedayat
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"Apparently, each person has several faces. Some constantly wear only one of these masks, which naturally becomes stained and furrowed. This group is frugal. Some reserve their masks only for their own affairs. Others constantly change their faces but as soon as they get old, they realise they are wearing their last mask, which soon becomes frayed and broken, then their true faces emerge from underneath the final mask.”

Trashcanman Hugs to you my friend 🤗 14mo
Bookwomble @Trashcanman Thanks, George 😊 🫂💖 14mo
Suet624 Truth. 14mo
35 likes1 stack add3 comments
quote
Bookwomble
Blind Owl | Sadeq Hedayat
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“There are people whose agony of death starts in their twenties, whereas many others, at the moment of death, gently, slowly, snuff out, like a tallow-burning lamp that has run out of oil.”

Apologies for a somewhat grim Saturday-morning quote, though, I guess, depending on your engagement with mortality, it's possibly comforting.

Suet624 I think I need to find this book. The two quotes I‘ve seen are fabulous. 14mo
39 likes2 stack adds1 comment
quote
Bookwomble
Blind Owl | Sadeq Hedayat
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"In life there are wounds that like termites, slowly bore into and eat away at the isolated soul."

#FirstLineFridays @ShyBookOwl

vivastory I read this one years and years ago. I recall really liking it. 14mo
Bookwomble @vivastory I'd never heard of it prior to seeing this new translation by Penguin at the bookshop. So many books... 😔🤔😌 I'm enjoying it, too. 14mo
36 likes2 comments
blurb
Bookwomble
Blind Owl | Sadeq Hedayat
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This was an impulse buy - it's got "Owl" in the title and I'm a bit of a strigiphile, so...???
Also, it's surrealist, psychological and was banned by the Shah of Persia, unbanned by the succeeding Iranian government, who then banned it again, presumably after reading it themselves and thinking, "Oh, shit! No!" It's short, so worth a bit of time. ?

Bookwomble The introduction looks spoilery, so I'll take Tolkien's advice and go straight to the author and read the introduction afterwards.
#BannedBooks
14mo
psalva @Bookwomble looks interesting! Also, that‘s good advice- I always read the intro last, particularly with classics. 14mo
batsy Oh, yes! I've had on my list for a long time. I'll keep an eye out for your posts. 14mo
30 likes3 comments
blurb
GatheringBooks
The Blind Owl | Sadegh Hedayat
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#Haunted Day 30: #Treats one and all - from the creepy book, to french-pressed coffee, and lotus crumble cake.

Eggs 🤎🍫☕️ 2y
BookwormM Cake looks yummy 2y
48 likes2 comments
review
Pauline888888
The Blind Owl | Sadegh Hedayat
Pickpick

Oh my God! When you read this novel, you feel like you go on a journey through LSD!
Magical...Haunting...Mysterious...At times erotic!

review
CampbellTaraL
The Blind Owl | Sadegh Hedayat
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Pickpick

Written/published in 1936 Tehran, Iran, it's an experience of opium-induced madness. There's a lot of literary analysis on GR but I feel like my first read isn't enough to comment, really. It's tough to wade through much of the chaos because you're aware this guy's state of mind is self-inflicted, and yet you want to empathize with the devastation of addiction.

At least I finished the book before the new year as planned.

BookwormM Ohh sounds good 3y
34 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
CampbellTaraL
The Blind Owl | Sadegh Hedayat
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Thanks for the tag, Danielle ( @MoonWitch94 )!

1. One of my first big crochet projects is a rather plain but durable throw blanket that my cat uses to keep her jelly beans warm throughout the fall/winter.

2. Yes! The Blind Owl by Sadegh Hedayat -- added to my TBR in undergrad about five years ago, finally got my copy last week. 💛📚

Tagging: @RamsFan1963 @Reggie

#Two4Tuesday
@TheSpineView

TheSpineView Thanks for playing! 😊 3y
MoonWitch94 You‘re welcome 💗📖 3y
21 likes2 comments
review
ReadingEnvy
The Blind Owl | ??diq Hid?yat
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Mehso-so

In my research for my year of focus on the Middle East, I discovered a book that is considered a classic from Iran that is not allowed in Iran. I will admit I found it quite impenetrable albeit mercifully short. The narrator appears to encounter a dead body that reminds him of another story and then there is a shift to all italics for 2/3 of the book while he describes opium dreams with a lot of repetition.

ReadingEnvy He calls his wife The Whore and mentions the smell of the end of a cucumber a lot. I can tell there are symbols in the text but don't know what they mean. I need to understand the context of it a little more. 4y
46 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
hwheaties
The Blind Owl | Sadegh Hedayat
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And this one, too!!

28 likes1 stack add
review
OffTheBeatenShelf.com
Blind Owl | Sadegh Hedayat
Mehso-so

Sadegh is like the Edgar Allen Poe of Iran, which felt accurate! The book was creepy, but not totally nightmarish. The only reason I gave it a so-so is because of overt symbolism & several repetitive images that weren't really ever revealed. It's possible I don't know them because I'm not Iranian, but I was hoping for some footnotes about the cultural aspects that western readers might not understand since they'd translated it into English anyway.

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OffTheBeatenShelf.com
Blind Owl | Sadegh Hedayat
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Wow, this clip on reading light is worthless! I normally use a headlamp (seriously, they're the best), but we just recently moved and I can't find it. I found an old reading light, but I seriously can't see a thing. This is particularly ironic considering I'm reading a book called The Blind Owl. It'd sure be nice to have some nocturnal animal night vision to go with this insomnia! 🦉💡

CouronneDhiver Oh no! 😕 7y
Lacythebookworm I'm curious about this book! Looking forward to your review 🙌 7y
OffTheBeatenShelf.com @Lacythebookworm It's pretty interesting so far! I'm mildly afraid because it apparently caused a bunch of people to commit suicide after reading it when it first came out. 😬😳 7y
aubergine123 Head lamps are totally the way to go. I choose ones that have red light since the modern head lamps have blueish lights that may keep me awake. 7y
OffTheBeatenShelf.com @aubergine123 I didn't even think about that! Good tip! 🙌🏼 7y
24 likes1 stack add5 comments
review
Alireza
Blind Owl | Sadegh Hedayat
Pickpick

This might sound weird but over the past 20 years I have read this amazing piece of art more than 6 or 7 times each time telling myself ahaaa I understood everything now. A philosophical look into humans life and loneliness. An account of pure love versus conventional likings. The book simply hurts and mesmerizes. Not a beach reading unless the sea is dark and rough.

shadows Are you in litsy yet?....are you reading blind owl yet alireza?can I ask a question...what do you think about this book today? 11mo
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review
DreesReads
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Panpan

1001 list read #159. Creepy like a bad dream. Is the unreliable narrator mentally ill? Physically ill? Or is it all the opium he is smoking? Is this daydreams or nightmares? Too casually violent for me.

14 likes2 stack adds
blurb
DreesReads
Blind Owl | Sadegh Hedayat
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This book is so weird, I need a drink.

BookishMarginalia Weird how? 8y
SusanInTiburon That drink looks a little weird, too 😄 8y
BekahB I don't remember what this is about, but I do remember that it's been on my TBR. 😄 8y
See All 6 Comments
DreesReads Apparently it's about madness, which is not clear at the beginning. Very unreliable narrator. I bit too casually violent for my personal taste. 8y
DreesReads @SusanInTiburon yes the drink is a little weird, I have a raspberry liqueur that is unpalatable without simple syrup. And ice. And vodka. It was a gift. I am no mixologist lol. 8y
SusanInTiburon @AudreyMorris Nor am I, but it looks like a perfect pairing. 8y
26 likes1 stack add6 comments