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Kazem Mostafavi, born Hamid Assadian, has written several novels inspired by the atrocities he personally experienced whilst living in Iran under the persecution of two totalitarian regimes, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and Ayatollah Khomeini. The harsh messages intended in the short stories in this book may be better appreciated if something of the author's life experiences and his inner conflicts on account of the path he has chosen to take are known. It is necessary to know what he has witnessed of the unbreakable resolve of brave men and women to defy inhumane practices even at the cost of their own lives for the sake of the generations that follow them. In his late twenties, he was jailed for five years as part of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi's purge on intellectuals. While in jail, he got to know certain fellow inmates who later rose to important ministries in today's Islamic Republic formed after the overthrow of the Pahlavi Dynasty in 1979. He silently observed the moral depravity of these inmates. They would bow down to the Shah's edicts, and to save their own skins, would readily betray their fellow inmates. Following the institution of the Islamic regime, these same inmates rose to political prominence. It was the foreknowledge of the sort of depraved government such men would preside over that caused him to flee his homeland and dedicate the entire rest of his life to his craft of writing as a powerful weapon to expose the injustices of the current Iranian regime. His novels, poetry and short stories benefit from the massive research he has done by way of interviews with hundreds of ex-prisoners who have described the variety of physical and mental tortures used by the Mullahs in Iran's notorious jails. The regimes hatred of him is in some part due to the large list he has made of guards and mullahs personally responsible for carrying out these tortures and rapes some of them still doing it today. Despite his own tragic history - his wife and daughter, still in Iran, have paid the price of his dissidence -- Mostafavi refuses to be defeated and continues to apply his pen to fight in exile for all the millions still suffering under this regime in the hope of helping fuel the efforts of these brave men women and indeed children, by publishing Flight of the Little Fish for the first time in the English language and he hopes to have many of his other works similarly retold in English.
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