In the years since her tragic death in a car accident at age thirty-two in 1967, Forough Farrokhzad—poet, painter, screenwriter, filmmaker—has become a literary figure as influential as Lorca or Akhmatova, celebrated as a feminist trailblazer of Iranian literature and as an iconoclastic figure of contemporary world literature. As Mehdi Jami writes in The Guardian, “In every culture you have cultural icons, like Shakespeare in Britain. Farrokhzad was like that for contemporary Iran, someone who formed the identity of our contemporariness.”
Thoughtfully curated and deftly translated, this Selected Poems from publisher New Directions gathers stunning work from Farrokhzad’s whole writing life, early to late, including the entirety of her posthumous collection, Let Us Believe in the Beginning of the Cold Season. Readers can thoroughly treasure this expansive poet of desire and loss, of classical reinvention, of lexical variation and sonic beauty, of personal and political despair, and of terrifying wisdom and hope.