San Francisco Chronicle

San Francisco Chronicle

"Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi is a new breed of erudite, conceptually ambitious authors...Above and beyond the sociopolitical undercurrent, Call Me Zebra is about the dead we love and communicate with each time we open a book (or access a memory).” SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE

New York Times Book Review

New York Times Book Review

"Ferociously intelligent.... With intricacy and humor, Van der Vliet Oloomi relays Zebra’s brainy, benighted struggles as a tragicomic picaresque whose fervid logic and cerebral whimsy recall the work of Bolaño and Borges." --Liesl Schillinger, NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW

Bomb Magazine

Bomb Magazine

“(Don’t)… miss the realization that the beauty of Zebra’s character lies in the very fact that literature is hyperbolic. At any given time, there is always a character crying out; a war announcing itself; a family getting torn apart; a relationship ending. This threat of an imminently catastrophic dissolution keeps Zebra hooked to the books she carries with her and also makes her a magnetically passionate character worth following." — Bomb Magazine

Shelf Awareness

Shelf Awareness

“Filled with literature, art and sex, Call Me Zebra is rambling and picaresque as quirky and funny as its rambunctious narrator. Its many digressions into philosophy and history are not obstacles--they are stepping-stones. Call Me Zebra is a grand story…” — Shelf Awareness

LA Review of Books - "The Call Me Zebra Author Excavates Her Buried Selves"

LA Review of Books - "The Call Me Zebra Author Excavates Her Buried Selves"

“Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi was born under the sign of exile. The author’s striking name combines Persian and Dutch, evoking two very different worlds which seep into her work in unwieldy and whimsical ways. Reading the Iranian-American’s new novel Call Me Zebra is a journey through what the writer calls the “psychosis of exile”—a dark descent into the depths of an identity crisis Oloomi is all too familiar with.” — LA Review of Books

The Millions

The Millions

"Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi’s novel about a difficult, funny, and troubled woman is at its heart a novel about the powerful role of literature in self-discovery." THE MILLIONS, "Self Discovery and the Limitations of Literature: On CALL ME ZEBRA"

Los Angeles Review of Books

Los Angeles Review of Books

"What Maggie Nelson’s The Argonauts did for gender and sexuality, Call Me Zebra does for the experience of exile, deftly threading the narrative with theory while also using theory to pull the reader in. Though Call Me Zebra happens to be fiction, both books are stuffed with complex ideas made irresistible and lyric. Both symbiotically use philosophy to clarify and amplify the human story. " LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOK

Music & Literature

Music & Literature

“That’s the triumph of this novel, to animate the movement of a mind, and in this case, a mind plummeting into the abyss of madness while struggling to maintain its grip. There is mystery within Fra Keeler and it largely remains a mystery—about Fra Keeler, and just where did he die? Isn’t that the way of life?” Music & Literature