Taghi Modarressi was born in 1932 (郾鄢郾郾) in Tehran, Iran, the son of a lawyer. Two years after the young Taghi had begun elementary school, his father passed away, leaving behind a widow and three sons who subsequently moved into Modarresi鈥檚 maternal grandfather鈥檚 house. Later his grandfather鈥檚 personal library provided him with a wealth of reading material, some of which inspired his literary creations. Taghi entered Tehran University Medical School, earned a medical degree, where he started also writing, became chief editor of Sadaf, a prestigious literary journal. Modarressi鈥檚 literary debut novel, Yakoly膩 wa tanh膩i-e u (Yakolya and Her Loneliness, 1955) was published in Iran when he was student. Modarresi鈥檚 interest in psychology drew him to researching z膩r, the traditional means of treating psychological illness, practiced in the Persian Gulf region of Iran. While visiting villages and collecting materials for his thesis, Modarresi had an encounter that changed the course of his life. Suspecting him of revolutionary and leftist motives, the secret police detained and questioned him and confiscated his tape recordings and notes. Becoming frustrated, Modarresi left Persia in 1959 for his post doctorate trainings in psychiatry and child psychiatry in Wichita, Kansas, took a residency at Duke University (1961-1963), which is where he met Miss Anne Tyler (), a popular American writer in 1963. They married and soon moved to Montreal, where he began a residency at McGill University, was a professor of University of Maryland. In 1982, he founded the Center for Infant Study, which is one of the few that offers psychiatric care for children under 5. In the late 1980s, Dr. Modarressi founded the Coldspring Family Center Therapeutic Nursery, housed at a Head Start center in Pimlico, which attempts to intervene as early as possible in the lives of children who have suffered emotionally scarring traumas. He died because of cancer in Baltimore, 1376 / 1997 at age 65. Anne Tyler wrote her memoir of living with Taghi in form of a novel in "Back when we were gone". In the years that Modarresi devoted to settling into his new life and profession, the only significant literary work he published was 艩arif j膩n, 拧arif j膩n (1961). It was not until after the 1979 revolution and the mass migration of Iranians to the United States that Modarresi found himself drawn back to fiction. He associates his return to writing with the discovery of what he calls a 鈥渘ew internal voice鈥�. This new voice enabled him to recover his literary voice in Persian and determined his approach to the translation of the two of his novels, Ket膩b-e 膩damh膩-ye gh膩yeb (The book of Absent People, New York, 1986), and 膧d膩b-e zi膩rat (The Pilgrim鈥檚 Rules of Etiquette, New York, 1989). The two novels begin to link the theme of inner exile with the realities of cross-cultural existence. Modarresi鈥檚 last, and as yet unpublished novel, Azr膩-ye Khalwat ne拧in (The Virgin of Solitude), also revolves around the themes of loneliness and inner exile that runs through Modarresi鈥檚 fiction. Taghi Modarressi is arguably the best example of a bilingual writer who wrote and published both in Persian and English. He is a good example of an active scientific / creative mind, like Bahram Sadeghi () and Gholamhossein Saedi (), lasted from Yakolia 1330's / 1950's to Azra of 1370's / 1990's, with a 24 years of break in between! As Modarresi was engaged in writing The Virgin of Solitude (Azr膩-ye Khalwat ne拧in), he was diagnosed with chronic lymphoma. In 1996 he retired from the University of Maryland and devoted more time to his fiction. He succeeded in completing The Virgin of Solitude before his death on April 23, 1997. Modarresi is survived by his wife, Anne Tyler, and two daugh