Discontent and Its Civilizations: Dispatches from Lahore, New York, and London
Discontent and Its Civilizations: Dispatches from Lahore, New York, and London book cover

Discontent and Its Civilizations: Dispatches from Lahore, New York, and London

Hardcover – February 24, 2015

Price
$24.15
Format
Hardcover
Pages
240
Publisher
Riverhead Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1594633652
Dimensions
5.75 x 1.25 x 8.75 inches
Weight
11.2 ounces

Description

“Hamid is an amazingly gifted writer, and Discontent and Its Civilizations is a near-perfect essay collection, filled with insight, compassion, and intellect. It's a powerful look at the way people juggle their individuality with the tensions that inevitably result from being part of a community.” —NPR“Often compelling … Its strongest entries reflect the same subtleties of thought [as his novels], laid down in his lapidary, crystalline prose. … The chapters about Mr. Hamid’s own life and his meditations on Pakistan’s tumultuous recent history … command attention — and call out for a volume of their own.”—Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times “Powered by innate wisdom and informed opinion … solid, questioning, explorative writing that not only picks fault and apportions blame but also offers tentative solutions. … The Hamid that emerges is a probing, critical political animal, one that is resistant to foreign intervention in Pakistan, anxious for more pluralism and tolerance within its borders, prepared to find good in the ‘brutal phenomenon’ that is globalization, and mystified—rightly—by ‘illusory’ civilizations.” — Daily Beast "Hamid is a deft and fluid novelist, unafraid to take on big topics…[In] Discontent and Its Civilizations …[he] make[s] a case for the way big issues unfold across individual lives. And yet his intent is not to trace the evolution of the war on terror but how it alters us on the most intimate terms." — LA Time s "Elegant, piercing [and] often funny." — The Chicago Tribune “The author of three groundbreaking novels...[Hamid] compels readers to see the global need for empathy as well as the need to acknowledge that we are all hybrid beings. And it is this blended approach—personal essays bolstered by research...that makes Hamid’s argument so successful…[T]his book is essential…important and urgent.” — The Brooklyn Rail “Whether the essays are brief, evocative op-eds or longer essays on literature and Pakistan’s history, they are always concerned, at their core, with the rippling impact of globalization …offering perspectives…that are little heard in the West… No matter where we live, Hamid’s insights are a testament to our shared responsibility and humanity.” — Biographile “The author of the buzzed-about novel How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia applies his global perspective to illuminating essays.” — O Magazine “Whether writing about global politics or theories of narrative, Mohsin Hamid is that rare writer who’s comfortable in both worlds. This collection of over a decade’s worth of his nonfiction is essential, expansive reading.” — Vol 1. Brooklyn "[A] must read." — Conde Nast Traveler “One of the most successful and inventive young novelists…[In Discontent] his self-deprecating and witty tone is utterly engaging.” —The New York Review of Books “Poignant and funny.” –Kojo Nnamdi, WAMU“A mesmerizing read.. Hamid seamlessly fuses the personal and the political…[his] perspective is essential to better understand our world.” - The Progressive "Vital...The essays' trenchant cultural commentaries and beguiling memory pieces illuminate Pakistan's present and past from both personal and political angles….On almost every page, Hamid's mind is as fresh in its perspective and limber in its logic as in his fiction…[and] delivers a portrait of a country that's impossible to reduce to a tidy set of traits.” — Oregon Live "These essays are vivid, full of sumptuous aphorisms on the role art can play in life…. The author’s best essays—like his fiction—shine by demolishing the boundaries.”xa0—A.V. Club“Perceptive and inspiring.” – Harvard Crimson "Superb." — Bookforum “[Hamid] is one of the most celebrated, inventive writers of the times.” —Ozy.com"Tearing down stereotypes and assumptions, Hamid gives an insider’s look that is truly unique.” — Brit & Co. “The short, crisp essays in Discontent are empathic yet critical reflections on family, nationalism, sex, economics, Islamophobia, literature, violence and other expressions of humanity…Affable and concise, Hamid also proves he is a journalist capable of distilling politically charged conflict into a compelling, measured form…par[ing] his viewpoints to give readers not oversimplifications but, rather, perspective.” – Shelf Awareness “Sharp…pithy [and] erudite.” — Christian Science Monitor “Remarkable…thought-provoking, even entertaining…a collection to be savored and to be reread.” –About.comxa0 "Smart doesn’t begin to describe Hamid; he is the sort of thinker that could change hearts and minds."— Booklist “ Mohsin Hamid is an important writer, not just in his conversational style that combines his personal convictions and depth of knowledge, but also in vantage point.” — Ask Men “Extremely insightful and illuminating.” –Book Riot “Eloquently written and richly informed…For longtime Hamid readers, this is a great compilation for getting reacquainted...For new readers, it is an excellent introduction…[to] an intelligent and impassioned writer whose work deserves a wide readership.” — Library Journal “Honest and candid…Passion and hope infuse Hamid's most incisive dispatches.”— Kirkus Reviews “[ Discontent ] give[s] a vivid sense of life lived close to the headlines…the recurring theme — that individuals matter more than the groups we try to assign them to — is as relevant as ever. And…the writing… is as simple, immediate and moving as any of Hamid’s fiction.” — Financial Times "A heartfelt celebration of diversity and the power of the imagination." —The Guardian “In contrast with the debased language of extremism, militarism and nationalism, [Hamid’s] is a humane and rational voice demanding a better future.” — Sunday Telegraph (UK) “Vivid touches…elevate Hamid’s intelligent… commentaries above the commonplace… Discontent suggests Mohsin Hamid is reasonable, intelligent….and humble. In short, just the sort of commentator the world could do with right now.” — The Independent (UK) “Lucid, informative and drily funny, these essays show that Hamid is one of the most perceptive commentators on contemporary global politics” — The Sunday Times (UK) “Elegantly crafted essays confront everything from the future of Pakistan and the death of Osama bin Laden to fatherhood and falling in love. The insights into Hamid’s literary style and influence will delight devotees of his work and intrigue newcomers…Hamid makes a compelling case for pushing back against the mono-identities of religion, nationality and race and for embracing the things that all human beings share” — The Prospect (UK) “Accessible, wise and beautifully clear.”xa0 — Metro (UK) Praise for How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia “A showcase for its author’s audacious talents…both an affecting and highly specific tale of love and ambition, and a larger metaphorical look at the startling social and economic changes that are…changing the lives of millions.” —Michiko Kakutani, “10 Favorite Books of 2013,” The New York Times “Extraordinarily clever.” — The Washington Post “Marvelous and moving.” — Time Mohsin Hamid is the internationally bestselling author of Moth Smoke , The Reluctant Fundamentalist , and How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia . His award-winning novels have been adapted for the cinema, shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, and translated into more than thirty languages. His essays and short stories have appeared in The New York Times , The Washington Post , and The New Yorker , among many other publications. Hamid now resides in Lahore, his birthplace, after living for a number of years in New York and London. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Art and the Other Pakistans(The Ones That Don’t Make the Headlines)Looking back, it’s obvious to me now that the Pakistan of my teens was bursting with art. I had a burly cousin who used to play (incongruously) with inks and watercolors in the afternoons when he got home from school. I had an aunt who was in the habit of telling over and over again the story of her random encounter with the famous artist Sadequain, an encounter that resulted in him executing what was surely his version of an autograph: a quick drawing depicting my aunt as a Nefertiti-necked goddess holding a flower above a line of calligraphy. I had seen the legendary painter Chughtai’s long-eyed ladies smiling out from drawing room walls, offering half-lidded innuendoes to easily flustered young men like me. And I had in the backdrop of my youth the Lahore Museum, the marvelous old city, the trucks and cinema billboards covered in bold, pelvis-thrusting iconography.But at the time, art felt to me like something that belonged either to the past or to other places, because my teens were in the 1980s, and Pakistan in the 1980s had the misfortune of being governed by a mustachioed dictator with dark bags under his eyes and a fondness for dystopian social reengineering. General Zia-ul-Haq claimed to be acting in the name of Islam, and even though the history of Islam in our part of the world stretched back over a thousand years, we were told that our Islam wasn’t Islamic enough, indeed that we Muslims weren’t Muslim enough, and that he would make of our Pakistan the “land of the pure” that its name suggested—or ruin us all trying.Under Zia, flogging, amputation, and stoning to death became statutory punishments. Acts disrespectful to symbols of Islam were criminalized. Public performances of dance by women were banned. News in Arabic, the language of the Koran but spoken by virtually no one in Pakistan, was given a prime-time slot on television. Thugs belonging to the student wings of religious parties seized control of many college campuses. Heroin and assault rifles flooded the streets, “blowback” from Pakistan’s alliance with the United States against the Soviets in Afghanistan. My parents reminisced about how much more liberal Lahore had been in their youth.When General Zia was blown to bits shortly after my seventeenth birthday in 1988, he wasn’t mourned, at least not by anyone I knew. I left for college in the United States a year later. There I met people who were studying photography and sculpture, and I myself enrolled in classes on creative writing. Without thinking about it, I supposed an education in these “artistic” pursuits was something in which only affluent societies in the West could afford to invest, or, rather, that only the twin luxuries of material success and tolerance of free expression could provide the sort of soil in which an artistic education could thrive.I was, of course, completely wrong. When I returned to Pakistan in 1993, I was working on what would become my first novel. I thought of writing as a transgressive act. I wrote at night, often from midnight to dawn, and in between writing sessions I would escape into the darkness with my friends. We drove around town in old Japanese cars, hung out on our rooftops, and searched for places beyond the reach of societal control or parental observation. Cheap local booze and even cheaper slabs of hash were the intoxicants of choice in that young urban scene, and avoiding the predations of the bribe-taking police was an alarming and amusing preoccupation.Increasingly I found my wanderings taking me into the world of the National College of Arts. A couple of my friends were enrolled there, one studying architecture, another graphic design. Others were dating students: painters, printmakers. It was unlike anything I had ever seen. Students of all social classes, and from all parts of Pakistan, attended NCA. The place was a microcosm of Pakistan, but of a creative Pakistan, an alternative to the desiccated Pakistan General Zia had tried to ram down our throats. Here people who prayed five times a day and people who escaped from their hostels late at night to disappear on sexual adventures in the city could coexist. In the studios I saw calligraphy and nudes, work by students with purely formal concerns, and by others for whom art overlapped with politics. I was inspired. I wrote like crazy. I made friends I have kept for life.Love comes to mind when I think of that time. There was a lot of it going on among the people I hung out with. But I was also falling in love with Pakistan. I have always had a stubborn affection for the land of my birth. When I went abroad for college, I thought I knew it pretty well. But it was my encounters with the denizens of the NCA universe after my return that reminded me that Pakistan is too vast a country to be known, that it is full of surprises, of kinks and twists, of unexpected titillations and empathic connections, of a diversity that can only be described as human. It was exciting and vital and real.Or rather, they were exciting and vital and real—for my Pakistan had become plural. The art, and artists, I found at NCA ushered me into many more Pakistans: the nascent underground music scenes, the emerging film and television scenes, the scenes of writers like myself, and of course the scenes of other art and other artists, not just in Lahore but in Karachi and Islamabad and elsewhere, and not just in 1993 but in the rest of the nineties, the noughties, and now.Just a few months ago I was in Amsterdam with two old friends from the Lahore art world. On a warm summer night we checked out some galleries and walked along the canals, whirring bicycles and shrooming teenagers passing us in the darkness. Nothing could have been more different from where we had all been fifteen years earlier. And nothing could have been more similar, either.(2009) Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From “one of his generation’s most inventive and gifted writers” (
  • The New York Times
  • )
  • ,
  • intimate and sharply observed commentary on life, art, politics, and “the war on terror.”
  • Mohsin Hamid’s brilliant, moving, and extraordinarily clever novels have not only made him an international bestseller, they have earned him a reputation as a “master critic of the modern global condition” (
  • Foreign Policy
  • ). His stories are at once timeless and of-the-moment, and his themes are universal: love, language, ambition, power, corruption, religion, family, identity. Here he explores this terrain from a different angle in essays that deftly counterpoise the personal and the political, and are shot through with the same passion, imagination, and breathtaking shifts of perspective that gives his fiction its unmistakable electric charge. A “water lily” who has called three countries on three continents his home—Pakistan, the birthplace to which he returned as a young father; the United States, where he spent his childhood and young adulthood; and Britain, where he married and became a citizen—Hamid writes about overlapping worlds with fluidity and penetrating insight. Whether he is discussing courtship rituals or pop culture, drones or the rhythms of daily life in an extended family compound, he transports us beyond the scarifying headlines of an anxious West and a volatile East, beyond stereotype and assumption, and helps to bring a dazzling diverse global culture within emotional and intellectual reach.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(61)
★★★★
25%
(51)
★★★
15%
(30)
★★
7%
(14)
23%
(46)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Life and the universe from the perspective of liberal globalist privilege

And yep, I know I sound like Rush Limbaugh, phrasing it that way, but the author pretty much defines himself so in his examination of Pakistan's minority and majority: "It is unsurprising that the privileged liberal position is the one most often associated with attempts to protect the rights of religious minorities in our country. It is also unsurprising that it has been largely unpersuasive."

So - self-awareness, check. Of course - Hamid is both journalist and novelist, with one foot squarely in the real world and the other in a world of introspection. He does not dissemble about his privilege, but it is largely an unspoken subtext that informs his writing in innumerable ways. How many of us in the U.S., for one example, have the social or economic wherewithal to call three far-flung countries home, and freely choose which to live in? Yes, he has to stay with his U.S. employer if he wants to live in the U.S. But the author is also well-connected and can leverage his professional standing into a London opportunity, or from there decide to return home to his beloved Lahore, where he now lives in a multigenerational household, viewing the ethos of a culture in tumult as a member of it, but also from a (literally) protected distance. It's a distance born of education and multiculturalism and exposure to global ideas, and one born of economic mobility and freedom. Hamid tells of looking into the possibility of installing blast-resistant film for his infant daughter's bedroom window, and his hesitation is entirely about the things he loves about this dangerous place he calls home: he wants to know if the view of an ancient, yellow blooming amaltas tree will be dimmed by the use of the film.

Almost anyone can identify with this mix of affection, nostalgia and caution, and indeed as Hamid talks about one day having to enroll his infant daughter in soldier-guarded public schools, the concern seems eerily prescient. (At this writing, a recent Pakistan school shooting credited to the Taliban is much in the news.) One hopes that a voice as clear and tender, but also realistic as Hamid's will remain vital, but there seems to be some blind spots here. He reports the shock of friends upon announcing that his family was returning to Lahore, and credits that to Pakistan being often "the bad guy" on the global scene. I'd tend to expect that his friends were less concerned about the politics and more for the personal safety of the author and his loved ones.

It was something of a tough slog of this reader through the largest section of this collection, which is entitled "politics". At times I felt in reading as though I embodied every stereotype of Western and particularly, probably, U.S. culture. OMG Sunni and Shia and Pashtuns and how do I keep all of this straight? Sadly, the history of near eastern nations and of the West's intervention therein is a convoluted tale, and one that has little place in the more general American consciousness. 9/11 resonated with us as nothing happening "over there" ever could, and has forever since dominated the national dialog. I'll come back and read some of these pieces again, if only because they are probably comprise the most accessible explanation of Pakistani's history with the west for which I have adequate attention span!

The fun part, of course, was the section entitled "art", and I'd love to read more from Hamid on the topics of pop culture and general, largely western contemporanea, even if that might largely be a waste of his considerable talents. We humans bond over gossip and trivial events as much as anything, and perhaps Hamid's vision of a world without the artificial construct of rival "civilizations" would be furthered by just such a frivolous dialogue between people of vastly different lands.
8 people found this helpful
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The greatest hits collection of a decent essayist.

This is a series of short essays, and the essay is a living art. Hamid is a clear and interesting writer. Not a great writer (in this non-fiction). A decent writer.

My first quibble is that this is a curated collection. In the introduction, Hamid notes that his off-point, mistaken, embarrassing essays were not included. I understand this; what writer wants to preserve the mistakes? But for a social commentator, such editing lends to a false depiction of percipience -- you come away thinking "this is one smart guy" rather than "this guy sometimes connects, and sometimes misses".

Second, some of his pieces read like small town op-eds about nothing -- pizza delivery in London, sensual sweat, etc.

That said, the range here is pretty good; sections on life, art, politics... travel for a Pakistani, the global world of television, novels, and writing. This is a cosmopolitan person, moving from Lahore to New York to London, one of the articulate elite, and the tone conveys both a sense of humor and sharp eyed cultural awareness.

When he talks about being a global traveler, it is a bit precious, but he is Pakistani, and does face barriers. When he talks about Pakistan's political woes, he is more interesting. If these pieces appeared in your local newspaper, you would say "interesting" and read them second, after the news.

This is a good airport book, and after reading this, his novels might be a better place to meet this writer...
6 people found this helpful
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It's a good book to read on post 9/11 Pakistan

It's a good book to read on post 9/11 Pakistan. The author does a good job of explaining Pakistan--and it's especially important coming from a Pakistani. One of the thing highlighted in these articles is the growing violence against minorities in Pakistan. At the same time there is increasing suspicion and discrimination against minorities in the West.
4 people found this helpful
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A highly readable, multicultural perspective on Pakistan and its relation to the West

Mohsin Hamid is a Pakistani who lived for many years in Lahore Pakistan, NYC, and London. Novelist and political commentator, he provides a unique perspective as he explains Pakistan to Americans, and illuminates Pakistani attitudes toward the United States. In this collection of brief essays written between 2000 and 2014, Hamid also sought to effectively bridge the U.S./Pakistan divide by presenting suggestions for a path of action which would increase understanding and cooperation between the peoples of these two countries.

Hamid divided this very readable anthology of brief articles into three sections - Life (with subjects including "Avatar in Lahore" and "On Fatherhood"), Art (with subjects including "How do E-Book s Changes the Reading Experience?" and "My Reluctant Fundamentalist") and Politics - the latter encompassing nearly half of this small, 225 page book, and providing the most substantial insight.

Pakistan is less than 1/12 the geographical area of the United States, but has almost 2/3 of the population that the U.S. has. The alliance between the U.S. and Pakistani military has resulted in undue hardship for millions of ordinary Pakistani citizens, increasing the casualty rate and homelessness resulting from terrorism/counter-terrorism attacks. The lack of a clearly defined border between Pakistan and Afghanistan contributes to the problem; the ongoing conflict between India and Pakistan over Kashmir also feeds Pakistani instability and violence.

Hamid's political articles - written in a fairly informal, almost conversational style - illuminate the highly diverse, contradictory facets of Pakistan. Referring to the "doublethink" concept of Orwell's 1984, Hamid explains that Pakistan has doublethink attitudes toward America ("America is our enemy; America should give us more aid") and toward religion ("Religion makes us all equal; only I decide what religion says." Hamid's articles, "Why They Get Pakistan Wrong," "Why Drones Don't Help," and "Nationalism Should Retire at Sixty Five," are the most enlightening.

"By backing the Northern Alliance against the Taliban then failing to include a meaningful representation of Pashtuns," Hamid tell us, "the U.S. not only sided with India in the Indian-Pakistani proxy war in Afghanistan, it also elevated a coalition of Afghanistan's smaller ethnicities above its largest ethnic group, the Pashtuns. Conflict was inevitable."

"Pakistan is a place of competing and overlapping clans, sects, tribes, beliefs and practices," Hamid says, while referring to the thesis of a book that he recommends, PAKISTAN: A HARD COUNTRY by Anatal Lieven. To cope with its chaotic diversity and contradictions, Pakistan relies on a number of both institutional and non-institutional structures, which are at times rigid, and at other times, resilient. Barely 65 years old, and with an unstable history, it is a country in which family, religious and tribal identifications have been strong and often fiercely held.

"We need to begin to dismantle the chauvinisms we have built....and think about a morality that is bigger than Pakistan or India or even China -" Hamid tells us, " - a morality that dares to be at least Asian in scale, and....ready to progress to something even larger, to the scale of humanity."
4 people found this helpful
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Essays on Life, Art and Politics

Having been born in Pakistan and having spent the greater part of his life in the US and the UK, Mohsin Hamid is able to bridge the cultural divide. His perspective is rare and valuable. He understands the US point of view and explains how it is heard and realized in Pakistan.

The essays are divided into topics of life, art and politics. In the first you learn about Hamid, his "water lily life" and how he chose to return to Pakistan. Having read this novels the essays on art were of interest. He writes of the authors who inspire him and how he writes.

The essays on politics, because of the knowledge and experience behind them are the heart of the book. Repeated themes are the Pakistan-India divide, the diversity of the Pakistani population, the weakness of the Pakistani government and the effects of US policy on everyday life. I learned that there is border dispute with Afghanistan that has not been on the US radar screen despite operations in this very area. There is a description of the “deep state” in Pakistan, and it seems to operate much like ours in thwarting peace efforts.

All the essays, like Hamid’s novels are short; they convey a lot and there is no need to make them longer. The dates of the works are significant and I liked that you don’t have to flip through the book to get the dates.

Hamid is guardedly optimistic. Despite overpopulation, weak economies, and anticipated flooding from global warming, he sees the coming century belonging to Asia. That Pakistan has had 5 years of democratic government and wants to improve relations with India.

The chapter “Fear and Silence” should be required reading for all high school students throughout the world.
2 people found this helpful
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The world through Pakistani eyes

Discontent and Its Civilizations -- interestingly, a reversed title of a Sigmund Freud compendium called Civilization and Its Discontents -- is a collection of essays by Pakistani novelist Mohsin Hamid. These essays appeared in a variety of publications, from London's The Observer to The New York Times and The Atlantic. In his 43 years, Hamid has lived in Pakistan, the U.S., London and now back in Lahore, Pakistan, where he was born and his parents live. His essays reflect his place in the world, how his country really is in contrast to how it is perceived, how it feels to be a father and a writer, and too many other topics to mention here.

The essays are mostly brief and easy to understand, offering an interesting perspective on a part of the world too often seen only as a breeding ground for terrorists and the nation where Osama bin Laden chose to hide before SEAL Team 6 took him out. Pakistan has had troubled times, indeed, and is still a challenging place to live, but Hamid also describes the strong bond of families there as a major reason why he moved back from London.

Hamid also discusses the writing life. One essay I particularly enjoyed was "Where is the Great American Novel by a Woman?" It's not anti-woman -- far from it.

The only thing that bothered me about this book -- and it isn't a major complaint -- is that the essays were not arranged in chronological order. Their arrangement by topic more or less precluded this, however. The essays span a 14-year period starting in 2000, with many changes, including 9/11, during those years. The date the essay was written is listed at the end of each piece, and you might want to check that before starting the essay to avoid confusion.

This short book -- 224 pages -- is a fascinating trip through Pakistan and the mind of one of its literary sons. It's a pleasurable learning experience.
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Five Stars

Superb read.
1 people found this helpful
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An appeal to acknowledge "individual humanities"

Anyone who has read Mohsin Hamid's three novels -- each of them distinctive in their theme and even their stylistic approach -- will have a sense of what to expect from this collection of non-fiction pieces by the author produced in the years that elapsed between the publication of the first of those works, [[ASIN:1594486603 Moth Smoke]] and the most recent, [[ASIN:1594632332 How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia]]. Even writing longform essays for the New York Review of Books, Hamid's prose is crisp and lucid; his carefully structured and reasoned arguments may at first obscure the extent to which Hamid is a passionate advocate, speaking his mind about topics that he feels are of vital importance.

From the outset, in his introduction, Hamid sets out his guiding principles. Having lived the life of a global nomad, his own loyalties are -- to some extent -- scattered, and he argues that this is an increasingly universal experience. "All of us, whether we travel far afield or not, are migrants through time. Even if you are eighty and have never left your hometown, yours has become another country from that of your childhood." And we inhabit an increasingly fractured world, with little sense of how to do so -- or even of the value of empathy. Many of Hamid's essays in the first and third sections of this short collection (those devoted to his personal life and to politics) touch on these themes. Through them, he explains how his childhood affection for (one) of his home countries ripened into a more mature and thoughtful love - and a not uncritical love, since while he points out the utter futility of drone attacks by the United States on Pakistan, he also is scathing about Pakistan's own inability (and perhaps reluctance) to come to grips with the tremendous challenge posed by the diversity within its own borders -- religious minorities (including variations on Islam, from Shia to Deobandi or Ahmadi, but also Christians and others), ethnic and tribal divisions, etc. He is willing to challenge "the West" on its Islamophobia and the readiness to view Islam as a monolith as opposed to countless individual lived experiences, crediting adherents with "too much agency in choosing their religion, and too little in choosing what to make of it."

Hamid's essays here are a challenge to his readers to think -- to think about their lives, to ponder their relationship to literature, and to reconsider the world in which they live -- and not simply to drift through life in a haze, wearing blinkers that separate them from one another.

They aren't all of equally caliber, of course. Generally speaking, I found some of the first group, those on Hamid's life, mildly interesting or amusing without offering me much more. "When Updike Saved Me from Morrison (and Myself)", for instance, read like the kind of dinner party story from someone in an MFA program busily name dropping to impress those around him. "In Concert, No Touching" was a tiny vignette that didn't measure up to some of the more thoughtful pieces here, even if it was elegantly written and fit into the whole in terms of theme. I found his essay on e-books overly predictable.

On the other hand, there are essays here that I expect I'll return to over and over again, from Hamid's tribute to [[ASIN:0811213587 Pereira Declares: A Testimony]] to his pitch-perfect manifesto about readers who demand that characters be "likable". (He reads, he says, to fall in love -- but he's just as capable of falling in love with a voice, with form, with plot, as with a "likable" character.) I can see myself shoving that piece into the hands of many, many people I know who claim not to like a book because they didn't like a main character's life choices.

I confess I'm predisposed to love the essay form, but when a majority of works in a collection are done well, and tackle subjects that are engaging or important, as is the case here, I can readily put to one side any reservations or concerns that I might be recommending a book simply because of the form. This was a delight to read, and I have found myself dipping back into many of the essays to experience them again or to remind myself of points that Hamid has made -- all of which are great signs.

Now, all I have to do is wait for the next novel...
1 people found this helpful
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Worth a read

The essays in this collection are organized into three sections: 'Life,' 'Art,' and 'Politics.' In my opinion, it's better to read the essays in sequence because you'll appreciate the later essays more if you've read the ones preceding them.

Mr. Hamid starts things off by sharing some biographical information through the essays in the 'Life' section, all of which are a quick read because of their brevity.

In the 'Art' section essays, Mr. Hamid shares some intimate details about writers and works he admires, why he's fond of using the second person perspective in his storytelling, what his thoughts are regarding printed versus digital books, how he's dealt with writing blocks, etc.

In the 'Politics' section essays, Mr. Hamid's passionate writing becomes evident. The essays delve a little bit into Pakistan's history, and Mr. Hamid's concerns and hopes for Pakistan's future. The essay "Why They Get Pakistan Wrong" is very well written and will help readers understand Pakistan better.

All of the essays in this collection have appeared in other publications between the years 2000 and 2014. The writing is pretty good, and the essays are worth a read if you haven't come across them previously.
1 people found this helpful
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No discontent for readers

Mohsin Hamid is a brilliant and inventive and often funny writer of fiction. And with this book he shows himself to be a fine writer of short nonfiction pieces (essays if you must) as well. It is rare indeed for those of us who have not lived in the Middle East to hear from cultivated non-fanatical voices. It is vanishingly rare for us to hear from a person with whom we can identify at all. Hamid is that voice.

The book is divided into three parts: Life, Art, and Politics.

Life is a set of memoir pieces, explaining his life as a "water lily" who has lived in and feels himself part of Pakistan, the US, and England, and illuminating his evolution as a writer. Some are funny, all are revealing, and all are interesting. In Art he ranges further afield, into his work and the work of others. We get to know him better.

Politics is where this pays off. By getting to know him we also get to trust him, so that when he tells us about his Pakistan, where people are appalled by terrorism and violence, and where ordinary people live difficult lives through no fault of their own, we trust him. The journey is worthwhile, and the reminder that Pakistan is not some caricature-monster populated by evil inhumans, but a (former?) dictatorship whose people are abused and misrepresented by their government. He doesn't deny the existence of the fanatics and terrorists, but he lets us know that they are no more representative of the people of Pakistan than the Westboro church or Terry McAuliffe are representative of ours.

Take the journey with him. It is as interesting and rewarding as his fiction.