> Skip to content
[]
Play sample
  • Published: 12 March 2026
  • ISBN: 9781837311231
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 128
Categories:

Women Without Men




A powerful and essential tale of female freedom

This internationally acclaimed masterpiece by one of Iran’s most important and influential writers traces the interwoven destinies of five women – including a wealthy middle-aged housewife, a sex worker and a schoolteacher – as they arrive by different paths to live together in an abundant garden on the outskirts of Tehran.

Drawing on recent Iranian history and transcendent elements of Islamic mysticism, Parsipur’s unforgettable novel sees women escaping strict confines of family and society. It is still as pertinent and discerning today as it was when travelling secretly from hand to hand upon its first publication in 1989.

  • Published: 12 March 2026
  • ISBN: 9781837311231
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 128
Categories:

About the author

Shahrnush Parsipur

Shahrnush Parsipur was born in Iran in 1946. She began her career as a writer of fiction and producer at Iranian National Television and Radio. She was imprisoned for nearly five years by the Islamist government without being formally charged. Shortly after her release, she published Women Without Men and was arrested and jailed again, this time for her frank and defiant portrayal of women’s sexuality. While still banned in Iran, the novel became an underground best-seller there, and has been translated into many languages around the world. She is also the author of Touba and the Meaning of Night, among many other books, and now lives in exile in Northern California.

Praise for Women Without Men

Women Without Men is the best feminist novel I know. It's thrilling, beautiful and hilarious, filled with weird women in transformation and the violent little men desperately trying to control them. I am convinced this novel is in fact a magic trick. Reading it feels like being invited to the rebellious unveiling of an age-old secret. It is both deeply mysterious and clear as water, filled to the brim with undeniable truth

Johanne Lykke Holm

Candid, enlightening and entertaining … There’s a sense of glee, where suffering goes out the other side and comes back as exuberance

John Self, The Times

Confronting, surreal and laced with Iranian mythology, Women Without Men sweeps you away in just over 100 pages. It is a defiant exploration of sexuality and identity through the interwoven lives of five women as they break free … and imagine a world beyond male control

Service95

Gracefully brutal... Parsipur writes with the surface simplicity of a tale-teller. But she drops in prosaic, stinging touches of realism - of gossip, envy, suppressed thoughts and misunderstandings

New York Review of Books

Parsipur is a courageous, talented woman, and above all, a great writer

Marjane Satrapi, author of Persepolis

Parsipur is one of Iran’s most celebrated living writers, and one of our boldest, most original feminists

Dina Nayeri, Guardian

Parsipur's layered tales, glittering in a fresh translation, continue to beckon you into a world that is simultaneously scoured by reality, and touched with fable and myth

2026 International Booker Prize Judges

Powerful … Parsipur blends magical realism with the heightened drama of a fairy tale, inverting familiar tropes … As the layers of misogyny are peeled back, the work’s full force emerges

Lucy Popescu, Financial Times

The feminist book that Iran’s regime has failed to silence since the 80s … The UK publication marks a hard-won return for a work that has outlasted bans, by a writer who has survived incarceration and forced displacement

Hind Elhinnawy, The Conversation

Using the techniques of both the fabulist and the polemicist, Parsipur continues her protest against traditional Persian gender relations in this charming, powerful novel

Publishers Weekly

Whenever she goes through an experience that might be leveraged for epiphany, catharsis or a clear moral lesson, Parsipur always goes for something more unexpected. It’s this that makes Women Without Men, for all its outlandish moments, profoundly human

Chris Power, Observer