
| Hardcover (2008/10/01) | Price: Rs 3628Rs. 3483 | Imported Edition. Order now and get it in 14-21 business days. |
Sixty years have passed since the Partition of India, and it's clear that Pakistani writers have established their own literary tradition to record the stories of their communities. Famed novelist Bapsi Sidhwa portrays a Pakistani community in Houston, Texas, still struggling to heal from the horrors of Partition. In Uzma Aslam Khan's tale, a man working in a Karachi auto body shop falls in love with the magical woman painted on a bus cabin. Bushra Rehman introduces us to a Pakistani girl living in Corona, Queens, who becomes painfully aware of the tensions between established Italian immigrants and their new Pakistani neighbors. And during the anti-Muslim sentiment following 9/11, a young woman in newcomer Humera Afridi's story searches Manhattan's rubble-filled streets for a mosque.
Filled with nostalgic memories of Pakistan, critical commentary about the world's current political climate, and inspirational hope for the future, the stories in "And the World Changed" weave an intricate, enlightening view of Pakistan, its relation to the West, and the women who travel between the two regions.
Born and living in Pakistan, writer and critic Muneeza Shamsie has edited two other pioneering anthologies of Pakistani English writing.
| barbara bradley hagerty jules garnier anshul kaushesh xrx books phil keoghan | m k chandrashekaran gary heil hazel arnett ervin celia m ross david drake |