Book Review: Sara Jafari’s ‘Things Left Unsaid’ is a tale of tentative lovers who keep connecting
Sara Jafari s Things Left Unsaid is a love-craving tumbling tale of two Iranian British friends who first meet in high school the self-skeptic and pessimist Shirin Bayat and the traumatized Kian Rahimi Kian was years old when his older brother Mehdi was incarcerated and blames himself partly for what happened Shirin for her part battles anxiety and depression In high school in the northern English city of Hull Shirin falls in love with Kian her only close male friend but she can t open up to him about it Kian feels the same about Shirin he fancies her and imagines her lips on his but kept it quiet Shirin and Kian both went their separate methods after school until years later when they unexpectedly meet again at a friend s party in London They have a lot in common They have both faced discrimination they were their school s only two non-white students and now Shirim finds the same situation at work Shirin kept thinking of Kian throughout the decade-long separation Even though Shirin kept in touch with her female friends from her high school days she unfailingly had a sense of unfulfillment a sense of pessimism and skepticism Her parents had separated when she was in college Shirin thinks there is an ugliness inside her sometimes various kind of repressed anger that she takes out on other people in her mind the author writes But her thoughts of Kian and her desire for them to be together again one day give her a sense of hope and relief When the two reunite again in London at their friend Millie s th birthday party Shirin s love for her old friend resurfaces But it comes a little too late Salma who Kian was now seeing is also at the party Shirin even asks Kian to kiss her but he doesn t because she s drunk These would-be lovers have one final meeting at a dinner party in New York in where Kian is now living She confesses to having a lot of regrets and that she had been thinking about him during their decade-long separation Kian confesses he had imagined her kissing him while they were in school Why didn t we make it work Kian asks adding that he demanded it to Shirin responds with I want that too Could this time be the time they completely get together Or has a gulf developed between them Beautifully written in simple language the London-based British Iranian author Jafari continuously pulls anxious readers along to find out what becomes of Shirin s and Kian s craving for each other AP book reviews https apnews com hub book-reviews Source