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Tahereh mafi
Tahereh mafi












tahereh mafi
  1. #TAHEREH MAFI PROFESSIONAL#
  2. #TAHEREH MAFI SERIES#
tahereh mafi

Here are some thoughts from Mafi on her books and writing.

tahereh mafi

Mafi is entirely confident in her choices, but she’s also aware that her books are more than art objects - they’re in conversation with her readers, including the devoted Mafi Mafia.

#TAHEREH MAFI SERIES#

When Tahereh Mafi’s “Ignite Me” publishes today, it’ll bring her bestselling young adult “Shatter Me” series to a close. Then again, I’m not sure such a book exists.Endings can be hard. I think I’d most like to be an undramatic, happy, well-adjusted character from a very pleasant story where only pleasant things happen. So many of the books I love are about tortured characters living through harrowing ordeals. If I could be a fictional character from any book, I would be… Some truly exceptional novels out in the world right now include All My Rage by Sabaa Tahir, Ain’t Burned All the Bright by Jason Reynolds, They Both Die at the End by Adam Silvera, Pachinko by Min Jin Lee, and The Unsinkable Greta James by Jennifer E. Making her smile is always my proudest moment.

#TAHEREH MAFI PROFESSIONAL#

Professional accolades are wonderful being nominated for a National Book Award was amazing learning that I’d sold millions of copies of my books was incredibly rewarding but when I watch my daughter run around shouting, “Mommy, this is the best day ever!” there is no greater joy, no greater feeling of fulfillment. I realize even as I prepare to type this that my answer will sound trite, but the most rewarding moments in my life have everything to do with my family. After that, I usually regain my momentum. I usually have to take a closer look at the previous scene and figure out where I went wrong - or what I was trying to force a character to do - before I can delete and try again. When I’m stuck in a scene it’s usually because I’m trying to forge ahead in the story despite having left something essential unresolved. We’re all so much more than a product of what we do for a living. I try to remind myself that - counterintuitive as it seems - I am not, in fact, my art. Writers put a great deal of ourselves into the things we create, which makes it feel, sometimes, like we’re putting a price tag on ourselves. I really treasure those hours.Įvery stage of the process - drafting, revising, promoting - can be taxing, but I think the most complicated aspect of writing (in the pursuit of publication) is the commodification of self. I wake up around 4am every day and work in the quiet hours before the sun comes up, before my email goes off, before anyone needs me. These days I get the best writing done before dawn. “ This Woven Kingdom was this delightful, secret thing no one knew about yet, which made it feel like a special escape.”įrom her home in Southern California - where she resides with her husband, fellow author Ransom Riggs, and their daughter - Mafi discusses work mantras, early mornings and the joys of motherhood. “I was able to let this fantastical world simmer in the back of my mind while I tackled other projects,” Mafi tells us. In the last three years, Mafi published four new books - including the critically acclaimed novel, An Emotion of Great Delight - while simultaneously working on the first in an exciting new trilogy, This Woven Kingdom, which launched last month. A decade later, and with more than a dozen books under her belt, the Iranian-American author shows no signs of slowing. Tahereh Mafi was just 23 when she debuted her bestselling young-adult series, Shatter Me.














Tahereh mafi