The fact that this book is written by a man born in Iran, the title had me worried, especially with that exclamation point. To say it pushed me off kilter wouldn’t be an understatement. It covers so much: art, perspective, stories and poems, religion, philosophy, politics and yes, even sexuality. I predict it will be the topic of many conversations which would otherwise avoid subjects of substance.
Cyrus Shams, a young man whose mother is on that fated passenger
airliner shot down by the US Navy in 1988. His father, a laborer, moves them to
the US and they end up in Indiana, where Cyrus attends a small liberal arts
college. Cyrus might be brilliant, but lives in an ennui that keeps him from
caring about performance, often doing only enough to keep from failing. He seems
always to be in an altered state, from alcohol, any kind of drug and does not
sleep. And he is considered pre-suicidal and obsessed with all martyrdom-- not just
religious or patriotic, but “Earth Martyrs”, and he wants his death to mean
something. Beyond all that, the book is full of biting satire and delightful humor.
The book is Cyrus’s search for that meaning. One of the things I love about the book is the occasional shift in viewpoint character, whether it is his mother, father, best friend, or other characters. It gives the reader perspective beyond Cyrus, whose narration is less than reliable. Akbar weaves mythology, classic poetry, music, and art into a collage that leads Cyrus to question and find answers to the big questions: what is love, death, reality. So much is told in dreams, whether natural or drug induced, that by the time I got to the end, I, too, questioned Cyrus’s reality.
The language of the novel thrives with Akbar’s poetic voice.
The book is not unlike a full-length poem, though, like the best poetry, it is
accessible to any reader. We like Cyrus, even when we know he is on a path of
self-destruction. We want him to succeed, but we want him to live.
This is an author to watch—he is a citizen of the universe,
and he’s not afraid to show the rest of us. Martyr! will be released on January 23, 2024 by Knopf. Thanks To Knopf and NetGalley for the opportunity to read this wonderful novel.