A review by zinelib
Tehrangeles by Porochista Khakpour

dark slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

Tehrangeles is told in multiple voices, and in some chapters has omniscient narration. Most (all?) of the narrators are members of the Milani family, Iranian-Americans living in Los Angeles, wealthy due to a frozen food sensation created by dad Al (Ali). Mom Homa is quiet, aloof, but somehow also all in on the family's 24-carat lifestyle. The daughters are Violet, a 20-year-old model; Roxanna-Vanna, a 17 or 18-year old influencer; Mina a maybe 15 or 16-year-old closeted she-doesn't-know-what-yet-but-definitely-queer, and Haylee is 14 and a gym rat/health nut.

We meet the Milanis in late 2019 as they're planning a new reality show with producers. The worldwide shut down shuts down production, as well, and the family are left to their own neuroses. Violet takes up baking, Haylee takes up QAnon, Mina goes deep on K-pop, and Roxanna...lasts about two months before she decides they need to throw a party.

At one point I wondered if the four-daughters were Little Women-ish, but I didn't think the personalities gibed. But somewhere near the end, one of the sisters references the Alcott book, and we learn from author Khakpour that there was a connection--Tehrangeles started as a sort of hate-write of Little Women. That makes me like it a little more, but ultimately, I found the narration changes frustrating and the characters unsympathetic. I guess if it's a hate-write, the characters are meant to be annoying, but I think the book would have benefited from less authorial distaste. 

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