AVA HOMA is a writer, journalist, and activist specializing in women’s issues and Middle Eastern affairs. She holds an MA in English and Creative Writing from the University of Windsor in Canada. Her collection of short stories, Echoes from the Other Land, was longlisted for the Frank O’Connor International Prize, and she is the inaugural recipient of the PEN Canada-Humber College Writers-In-Exile Scholarship. She was born and raised in the Kurdistan Province in Iran and now divides her time between Toronto and the Bay Area. Daughters of Smoke and Fire is her debut novel.
"At a time when the Kurds are so much in the news in Iraq and
Syria, the Iranian government has erected a wall of silence around
its own much larger Kurdish population. This magnificent novel
penetrates that wall with its story of coming of age, oppression,
and death. Beautifully written, it is the best new work of fiction
to emerge from the Near East in a long time.”
*author of The End of Iraq*
“There is no more urgent a task for humanity than more fully
knowing one another. . . . This desperate gift is what comes our
way from Ava Homa, a brave and brilliant storyteller, the first
female Kurdish novelist writing in English who shows us, through
one family’s story, the stakes faced by the Kurds. Read this book.
Raise your voice. We can no longer afford the ‘us and them’
mentality if we are to survive.”
*Joy Kogawa*
“Gripping . . . Daughters of Smoke and Fire is a haunting piece of
political fiction and a gut-punch tale of an alienated Kurdish girl
swimming upstream against a tide of sexism and ethnic hatred. The
scars Homa bears as a Kurdish feminist reared under Iranian rule
and living now in the ‘cruelty of exile’ are evident on every
page.”
*author and award-winning documentary filmmaker of Good Kurds, Bad
Kurds*
“A coming-of-age story that layers intergenerational trauma and
political commentary on a decades-long epic. . . . Homa’s portrait
of Kurdish life in Iran brings readers closer to lived experiences
that force questions of identity, homeland, and the traumas we
inherit.”
*Booklist*
“Daughters of Smoke and Fire is a compelling narrative of
consciousness and empowerment that skillfully intertwines the
personal and political, joining a story of suffering and trauma
with one of love and desire. The novel is striking and original in
its refusal to romanticize life under oppression. It is a story of
visible and invisible scarring, of violence and suffering
transmitted across generations, of gender oppression and political
exclusion and silencing, but it is also a moving and timely novel
of hope and transformation, and of self-liberation.”
*author of Kurds and the State in Iran: The Making of Kurdish
Identity*
Daughters of Smoke and Fire is a riveting story of a family that
unlocks our imagination to the struggle of being and living as
Kurds. An absorbing fiction with social and political insights into
Kurdish identity, politics, and women’s lives. The audacious
character, Leila, is memorable for her struggle to survive and to
stay free. Ava Homa in fiction echoes the real dreams and desires
of Kurdish women for freedom.
*author of Women of a Non-State Nation: The Kurds*
“While this book is about a Kurdish family in Iran, the story could
be about any minority living under the rule of an oppressive
majority demanding their assimilation. Homa has created a story
that’s both personal and universal in its scope. Daughters of Smoke
and Fire might break your heart, but it’s also a book of sublime
beauty that will engrave itself into your memory for years to
come.”
*Seattle Post Intelligencer*
“Stark and elucidating . . . Through the courageous character of
Leila, Homa paints a picture of many Kurdish women who have
struggled against persecution and misogyny. . . . Homa’s remarkable
novel serves as a potent and illuminating window into the
persecution of the Kurds.”
*BookPage*
“Daughters of Smoke and Fire not only provides us with a voice that
we have been missing, but it serves as a great equalizer of
humanity and is a call to action to expose the oppression,
persecution, and prejudices that are still very much alive and
neglected in today’s world of globalization.”
*Hamilton Review of Books*
“More than a novel, Daughters of Smoke and Fire is an evocative and
brutally honest chronicle of the problems that thwart the lives of
40 million stateless Kurds”
*San Francisco Chronicle*
A fiery, soul-nourishing novel.
*Los Angeles Review of Books*
A blisteringly powerful tale of standing up to oppression.
*The Independent*
“Homa unfurls the history of an oppressed people fighting for their
right to live, love, thrive, and create.”
*Chicago Review of Books*
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