1 of 1 1rev2 Inbox Max Nabati3:07?AM (1 minute ago) to me ### Long Description"1st Seven Stories" by Max (Shahrooz) NABATI is a captivating collection of seven short tales that delve into the complexities of human relationships, betrayal, and the search for meaning amid life's unexpected twists. Revised in September 2025, this anthology weaves personal narratives across diverse cultural landscapes, from the bustling streets of Tehran to the humid shores of the Philippines, blending raw emotion with subtle cultural insights.
The opening story, "Joke's on me!", sets a poignant tone as Reza reunites with his uncle Sina in Tehran, uncovering layers of heartbreak and resilience. Sina's tale of love lost to infidelity and financial ruin culminates in a spark of creative redemption, urging him to channel pain into storytelling-a meta nod to the book's own genesis."Free Rides" shifts to the tropical allure of Dumaguete, where backpacker Mike's whirlwind romance with affluent Tanya unravels into a web of luxury, deception, and crime.
As freebies turn suspicious, Mike grapples with trust and escape, highlighting the dangers of superficial connections in exotic locales. In "Subtle Cracks, " a seemingly perfect couple, Daniel and Elise, confronts insecurities in their urban apartment. A lingering dating app notification exposes past wounds and unspoken doubts, testing whether openness can mend a fracturing bond or widen the divide."Jannat Rudbar" offers a raw, first-person account of a divorced Iranian woman's turbulent affair with Jalal, set against familial obligations and societal pressures.
Amid remarriage proposals, liposuction transformations, and shocking discoveries, she navigates passion, jealousy, and self-worth in Iran's conservative yet vibrant social scene."The Apple Tree" reimagines a historical moment with poetic flair: an ancient tree, craving solitude, inadvertently inspires a young thinker's epiphany through a falling apple. This fable explores nature's unwitting role in human discovery, blending whimsy with philosophical depth."Farang" follows James, a British wanderer in Krabi, whose fabricated Buddhist identity entangles him in a romance with hotel manager Anchali.
Lies about faith and family erode their connection, culminating in cultural clashes and veiled threats, as James questions the cost of his deceptions. The collection closes with "Your nose is bleeding!", a tense psychological thriller where a traveler awakens blindfolded and bound, accused of a bizarre crime. As threats escalate, the line between reality and prank blurs, revealing the dark side of friendship and shared secrets.
NABATI's prose is intimate and evocative, drawing from personal experiences to probe universal themes of love's fragility, cultural identity, and redemption. Footnotes provide contextual depth, enriching stories rooted in Iranian traditions, Philippine vibrancy, and global wanderlust. At 79 pages, this debut anthology is a compact yet profound exploration of how betrayal-romantic, self-inflicted, or playful-shapes our paths.
Ideal for readers seeking emotionally charged fiction that transcends borders, it leaves one pondering: in the joke of life, who's truly laughing?
1 of 1 1rev2 Inbox Max Nabati3:07?AM (1 minute ago) to me ### Long Description"1st Seven Stories" by Max (Shahrooz) NABATI is a captivating collection of seven short tales that delve into the complexities of human relationships, betrayal, and the search for meaning amid life's unexpected twists. Revised in September 2025, this anthology weaves personal narratives across diverse cultural landscapes, from the bustling streets of Tehran to the humid shores of the Philippines, blending raw emotion with subtle cultural insights.
The opening story, "Joke's on me!", sets a poignant tone as Reza reunites with his uncle Sina in Tehran, uncovering layers of heartbreak and resilience. Sina's tale of love lost to infidelity and financial ruin culminates in a spark of creative redemption, urging him to channel pain into storytelling-a meta nod to the book's own genesis."Free Rides" shifts to the tropical allure of Dumaguete, where backpacker Mike's whirlwind romance with affluent Tanya unravels into a web of luxury, deception, and crime.
As freebies turn suspicious, Mike grapples with trust and escape, highlighting the dangers of superficial connections in exotic locales. In "Subtle Cracks, " a seemingly perfect couple, Daniel and Elise, confronts insecurities in their urban apartment. A lingering dating app notification exposes past wounds and unspoken doubts, testing whether openness can mend a fracturing bond or widen the divide."Jannat Rudbar" offers a raw, first-person account of a divorced Iranian woman's turbulent affair with Jalal, set against familial obligations and societal pressures.
Amid remarriage proposals, liposuction transformations, and shocking discoveries, she navigates passion, jealousy, and self-worth in Iran's conservative yet vibrant social scene."The Apple Tree" reimagines a historical moment with poetic flair: an ancient tree, craving solitude, inadvertently inspires a young thinker's epiphany through a falling apple. This fable explores nature's unwitting role in human discovery, blending whimsy with philosophical depth."Farang" follows James, a British wanderer in Krabi, whose fabricated Buddhist identity entangles him in a romance with hotel manager Anchali.
Lies about faith and family erode their connection, culminating in cultural clashes and veiled threats, as James questions the cost of his deceptions. The collection closes with "Your nose is bleeding!", a tense psychological thriller where a traveler awakens blindfolded and bound, accused of a bizarre crime. As threats escalate, the line between reality and prank blurs, revealing the dark side of friendship and shared secrets.
NABATI's prose is intimate and evocative, drawing from personal experiences to probe universal themes of love's fragility, cultural identity, and redemption. Footnotes provide contextual depth, enriching stories rooted in Iranian traditions, Philippine vibrancy, and global wanderlust. At 79 pages, this debut anthology is a compact yet profound exploration of how betrayal-romantic, self-inflicted, or playful-shapes our paths.
Ideal for readers seeking emotionally charged fiction that transcends borders, it leaves one pondering: in the joke of life, who's truly laughing?