1937 - 2000
Iranian fiction writer, poet, essayist, and editor.
Houshang Golshiri was born in Isfahan to a working-class family. When he still was a child, the family moved to Abadan, where his father had found work in the oil industry. The family moved back to Isfahan when Golshiri was in high school, and he completed his secondary education in his native city. He attended college and earned B.A. and M.A. degrees while working to help support his family. His first essays, poems, and short stories were published in literary journals in the early 1960s. In 1965, he and two other Isfahan writers founded Jong-e Isfahan (Isfahan anthology), a semiannual short-story magazine that brought Golshiri national attention. In 1969, his novella Shazdeh Ehtejab (Prince Ehtejab) was published. It was made into a popular Iranian movie and was translated into English and other languages.
Golshiri wrote against political oppression and censorship, and his efforts on behalf of freedom of expression resulted in his arrest by the SAVAK on three occasions during the reign of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi. After the Iranian Revolution, the government forbade the publication of many of his works. In 1989, one collection of short stories was published in Persian in Sweden. His novel about repression under the Islamic Republic, Shah-e siyah pushan, was published in 1990 in English translation as King of the Benighted. In 1999, Germany awarded him the prestigious Erich Maria Remarque Peace Prize.
Bibliography
Golshiri, Houshang. Black Parrot, Green Crow: A Collection ofShort Fiction, edited by Heshmat Moayyad. Washington, DC: Mage Publishers, 2003.
— PARDIS MINUCHEHR
UPDATED BY ERIC HOOGLUND




