"[Saïd Sayrafiezadeh is a name] that you may want to remember...if this exacting and finely made first book is any indication...[He] writes with extraordinary power and restraint...[His] prose has some of [Isaac Bashevis] Singer's wistful comedy, and good deal of that writer's curiosity about the places where desire, self-sacrifice and societal obligation intersect and collide."–
New York Times "[Sayrafiezadeh] writes with grace and clarity about growing up juggling deprivation and desire."–
Time
"Sayrafiezadeh looks back with wonder, even humor, at the many difficulties he faced in his childhood...[He] maintains a generous spirit throughout this eloquent memoir."–
Washington Post "A memoir is a bold thing to write so young, but the author pulls it off with pathos and humor, proving some histories are best written early."–
GQ
"[A] wry, lovely memoir."–
O: The Oprah Magazine
"Once I began
When Skateboards Will Be Free, I couldn't put it down but to sleep. So rending a memoir, it reaches the reader's innermost consciousness. Its language has the fierceness and humor of a Charles Dickens story about childhood." –Paula Fox, author of
Desperate Characters and
Borrowed Finery "Said Sayrafiezadeh has a wry, deadpan sense of humor, an exceptionally open heart, and the wisdom of a true outsider.
When Skateboards Will Be Free shows us exactly how he came into possession of these rare qualities. This is a fantastic, beautifully written memoir." –Scott Smith, author of
A Simple Plan and
The Ruins "
When Skateboards Will Be Free is a brave, honest and elegant book. It felt like the story was being whispered in my ear. I haven't read a memoir in quite a while that has so skillfully made sense of an American childhood." –Colum McCann, author of
Zoli "Sad, angry, hilarious, heartbreaking, and brave–
When Skateboards Will Be Free does everything a fine memoir should, and more. That Said Sayrafiezadeh survived his childhood in one piece would be triumph enough, but this beautiful book expands that personal triumph into art. It belongs on the shelf next to the best modern memoirs." –Dani Shapiro author of
Black and White and
Family History "Sayrafiezadeh's memoir is lucid, heartbreaking, finally uplifting. This is a jail-break of a book. I loved it." –Thomas Beller, author of
The Sleep-Over Artist and
How To Be a Man "Do not pity Sayrafiezadeh his childhood of deprivation–wonder at his ability to transform poverty into comedy and genuine suffering into joy." –Sean Wilsey, author of
Oh the Glory of It All "This is a remarkable memoir of a fragmented childhood." –Dalia Sofer, author of
The Septembers of Shiraz "
When Skateboards Will Be Free is fraught and funny and haunting. Sayrafiezadeh never flinches, but neither does he stint on compassion. A wonderful recounting of a childhood, this book is also a powerful exploration of how belief binds families, and tears them apart." –Sam Lipsyte, author of
Home Land " Haunting ... A memoir full of surprises."–
Booklist