AMAR — Persia @ 7:31 is a luminous, contemporary novel set in Dallas’s Design District, where ritual, family, and the politics of visibility collide. Architect and narrator Leo Landin finds his world transformed by Amar Vaziri, a trainer whose daily routine at 7:31 a.m. becomes the heartbeat of the block. Their connection—subtle, charged, and quietly revolutionary—unfolds against the backdrop of the Vaziri family’s Persian shop, where tea, kindness, and tradition are both shield and invitation. As Leo is drawn into the rhythms of Amar’s family—Babak, the proud father; Maman, whose tea is policy; Nika, the razor-sharp sister; and a chorus of market aunties—the novel explores the tension between public image and private truth. The shop’s sign, “We practice kindness. We fail gracefully,” becomes a manifesto as the family navigates Dallas’s surveillance culture, social media rumors, and the threat of scandal. When a viral photo and extortion attempt threaten their reputation, the community rallies, transforming crisis into a celebration of civility and resilience. Through moments of humor, heartbreak, and hope, Leo and Amar’s relationship deepens, challenging the boundaries of tradition and the cost of honesty. The story is rich with Persian phrases, rituals, and food—sabzi polo dinners, saffron tea, and koloocheh cookies—serving as both hospitality and governance. The narrative is punctuated by the recurring motif of “windows vs. walls,” asking what it means to be seen, to belong, and to choose kindness as strategy. As the Vaziri family faces vandalism, landlord threats, and the complexities of diaspora, they forge new policies: “Photograph art, not people. With respect.” The community’s response—petitions, tea hours, and signatures on plywood—turns adversity into art, and the shop into a sanctuary for all who value dignity over spectacle. AMAR — Persia @ 7:31 is a celebration of chosen family, cultural inheritance, and the courage to live out loud. With lyrical prose and unforgettable characters, Leo Landin crafts a story where love is not thunderclap but calendar discipline, and where windows choose their truths. Perfect for readers who cherish found family, multicultural narratives, and the quiet power of everyday resistance. Themes: Chosen family and queer love - Persian-American identity and diaspora - Community, kindness, and the politics of visibility - Rituals, food, and the meaning of home - Resilience in the face of rumor and surveillance For fans of: Ocean Vuong, André Aciman, and Brandon Taylor - Literary fiction with multicultural, LGBTQ+, and found-family themes