Peyman Esmaeili

His works are heavily influenced by endless airstrikes and casualties, and Kernashahsh's harsh winters have shaped his memories of the formative years of his life.

[2] At the age of eighteen, Peyman moved to Tehran to study electrical engineering, a discipline that led him to jobs in the oil and gas industry, his full-time on-site work and tasks, did not stop him from pursuing his passion for literature.

The most significant part of his resume as a freelance journalist is the series of interviews he conducted with famous Western writers such as Kurt Vonnegut, Joyce Carol Oates, Stanisław Herman Lem,[3] Jhumpa Lahiri, Paul Auster, and Michael Cunningham.

Peyman has started on this novel when he moved to Australia, a life-changing experience that greatly influenced his writing, and especially his recent work, let's go back tonight (2017), a collection of five stories that can be described as the author’s contemplations on migration.

Three elements in his fiction distinguish his work from that of other writers of his generation: first, the rural and sometimes wild settings that take the reader away from the social and inner struggles of Tehran’s middle class.