"In a tiny village in rural Iran, Zal's demented mother--horrified by his pale skin and hair, the opposite of her own--becomes convinced her baby is evil. She puts him in a wire birdcage on her
veranda with the rest of her caged flock, and there he staysfor the next ten years: eating birdseed and insects, defecating on the newspaper he squats upon, squawking and shrieking like the
other birds.He is rescued from that hell and adopted by a behavioral analyst who brings him to New York and sets out to helphim find happiness. Zal is emotionally stunted, asexual, physically
unfit, and trying desperately to be human as he stumbles through adolescence. His fervent desire to be normal grows as he ages, but the fact that he still dreams in "bird" and his
secretpenchant for yogurt-covered beetles make fitting in a challenge. He forges a friendship with a famous illusionist who claims he can fly--another of Zal's bird-like obsessions--and embarks
on a romantic relationship as well. His girlfriend, Asiya, crumbling under the weight of her supposed clairvoyance, sends Zal's life spiraling out of control. Like the rest of New York, he is
on a collision course with tragedy. The Last Illusion is a wild, operatic, and startling homage to New York and its most harrowing catastrophe. It is tragic but laugh-out-loud funny, irreverent
yet respectful, hugely imaginative yet universal"--