Deeply reported and quietly devastating ... One of the most perceptive books on modern Iran in years, capturing not only the machinery ... If the first half of Stolen Revolution traces the consolidation of power, the second turns to the persistence of resistance. Here the book becomes especially alive in its portrait of younger Iranians who experienced the revolution not as a lived memory but as a political inheritance ... If the book has a weakness, it lies in its title. Stolen Revolution implies a cleaner break than the evidence supports ... At times, too, the narrative leans toward inevitability, as though the movement from hope to repression were somehow preordained. But the book itself repeatedly reveals moments when events might have unfolded differently or when public pressure forced lasting concessions, however small.
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