Novel of former Taoiseach's daughter in Iran
"A Place Called Here" a novel by Irish writer Cecelia Ahern has been published in Iran. She is the daughter of former Taoiseach. IBNA: The book is translated into Persian by Hediyeh Mansour Kiani and it is published by Nowrooz Honar.
"A Place Called Here' is Ahern's fourth novel, published in 2008. The book was entitled "There's No Place like Here" in the United States and it is translated into 46 languages so far.
Since its publication the book is among the bestsellers and its series adaptation is underway as well.
The book tells the story of Sandy Shortt who has been obsessed with finding things she has lost, since her childhood rival Jenny-May Butler went missing. Having worked for the Garda, she left her job to start an agency which looks for missing people.
Jack Ruttle asks Sandy for help looking for his younger brother Donal, who went missing the year before. She agrees, never expecting to become missing herself as she discovers the world where everything which has ever been lost goes, a place called "Here".
Born Cecelia Ahern on September 30, 1981 in Dublin, Ireland, she is the daughter of the former Irish Taoiseach Bertie Ahern.
Before starting her writing career, she obtained a degree in Journalism and Media Communications from Griffith College Dublin.
In 2002, when Cecelia Ahern was twenty-one, she wrote her first novel, PS, I Love You, that published in 2004, was the number 1 bestseller in Ireland (for 19 weeks), the United Kingdom, U.S., Germany and Holland. It is sold in over forty countries. The book was adapted as a motion picture.
Her second book, Where Rainbows End (U.S. Love, Rosie), also reached number 1 in Ireland and the UK, and won the German CORINE Award in 2005.
Some of her novels are "If You Could See Me Now", "Thanks for the Memories", "The gift" and etc…
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