Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Shadows

Pakistani writer Kamila Shamsie’s `Burnt Shadows’ begins with a melancholic verse from Sahir Ludhianwi about war. That lyric and melancholic strain continues to haunt the next 363 pages as Shamsie weaves a compelling story about a woman’s journey from Japan to India to Turkey to Pakisan and finally in New York.

Hiroko
Tanaka hops from one historical chapter to another – the bombing of Nagasaki, pre-partition Delhi, partition and the creation of Pakistan, the raising of the mujhahideens to fight the Soviets, and 9/11.
Hiroko's journey also glues together two families – three generations of the Burtons and the Ashrafs – whose lives violently change as big tragedies of the 20th century wreck their worlds.


The narrative is powerful and is one of the best post-9/11 works after Mohsin Hamid's The Reluctant Fundamentalist. Like the latter, however, Shadows is not a novel of ideas though Shamsie dwells on topics from the horrors of nuclear war to Islamic fundamentalism, racial profiling and private military contractors. She makes up for it with a powerful story.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

No post updates after Shadows?

shhibs said...

thanks for the response. been a bit tied up with work lately, but am wrkin on a couple of posts - will update it soon )

Anonymous said...

last few days our class held a similar discussion on this topic and you illustrate something we have not covered yet, appreciate that.

- Laura

shhibs said...

Thanks laura for the comments

Anonymous said...


Some really select articles on this internet site , bookmarked)))

Anonymous said...


You should continue the good work forever! Good Luck.

Anonymous said...


Hmm it seems like your site ate my first comment (it was extremely long) so I gueses.

Anonymous said...


If possible, as you gain expertise, would you mind updating your web page with more details?

Anonymous said...


Wonderful work! This is the type of info that should be shared around the net.

Anonymous said...


Youre so awesome, man! I cant believe I missed this blog for so long. Its just great stuff all round.

Anonymous said...


Excellent post. I learned a lot reading it. Thanks.