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DEAR MR JINNAH
The memoir blends Faruqui’s personal reminiscences with eyewitness accounts of key political developments in the country’s history from 1947 when he and his family were abruptly uprooted during the Partition, till 2017, when he completed his tenure as the Federal Ombudsman of Pakistan.
Faruqui served in the secretariats of Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and Prime Minister Junejo and held some of the top civil service positions in the country, including Ambassador At Large, Secretary General to the President of Pakistan, and Deputy Chairman Planning Commission. This memoir provides a rich tapestry of anecdotes that illuminate Pakistan’s tumultuous political landscape. ‘Dear Mr Jinnah’ acts as both a tribute to the nation’s founder, Muhammad Ali Jinnah and a reflection on the hopes and disappointments of a seasoned civil servant. The book delves into the challenges, missed opportunities, and self-inflicted roadblocks that Pakistan has faced over its seventy years as a nation. Faruqui’s insightful and thought-provoking insider perspective sheds light on the complexities of Pakistani politics.
With a memorable line “Nothing moves with a clear destination within Pakistan, except the mighty Indus.” Pakistan’s historian Professor wrote, “There is much here for students of history and a general readership to learn and benefit from”.
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UNVEILING JAZBAA
Jazbaa Definition: spirit, feeling, passion, desire, sentiment, emotion In 1996, Shaiza Khan led a Pakistan team on a tour of New Zealand and Australia. While the tour was a failure on the cricketing front, the singular act of eleven women wearing flannels and battling for victory in the faraway antipodes was a significant achievement. These women had – individually and collectively – worked to throw off the shackles of social and cultural decrees that had conspired to keep Pakistani women away from sport for years. Even more importantly, these players were harbingers of change who became heroic role models for women back home and all around the world. Unveiling Jazbaa tells the story of Pakistan’s women’s cricket, detailing the extraordinary journey the players have been on to bring about change both in their country and in the sport itself. This is a tale told through the lens of society and politics, of personal battles and triumphs against the odds, of friendships and rivalries, of favours and revenge. Above all else, it is story of bravery and unerring will and a moving testimony to power of the human spirit. Foreword by Kamila Shamsie Compelling, ambitious, beautifully written and about so much more than cricket – Tim Wigmore, The Telegraph and author of the multiple award-winning Cricket 2.0
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DEAR MR JINNAH
The memoir blends Faruqui’s personal reminiscences with eyewitness accounts of key political developments in the country’s history from 1947 when he and his family were abruptly uprooted during the Partition, till 2017, when he completed his tenure as the Federal Ombudsman of Pakistan.
Faruqui served in the secretariats of Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and Prime Minister Junejo and held some of the top civil service positions in the country, including Ambassador At Large, Secretary General to the President of Pakistan, and Deputy Chairman Planning Commission. This memoir provides a rich tapestry of anecdotes that illuminate Pakistan’s tumultuous political landscape. ‘Dear Mr Jinnah’ acts as both a tribute to the nation’s founder, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, and a reflection on the hopes and disappointments of a seasoned civil servant. The book delves into the challenges, missed opportunities, and self-inflicted roadblocks that Pakistan has faced over its seventy years as a nation. Faruqui’s insightful and thought-provoking insider perspective sheds light on the complexities of Pakistani politics.
With a memorable line “Nothing moves with a clear destination within Pakistan, except the mighty Indus.” Pakistan’s historian Professor wrote, “There is much here for students of history and a general readership to learn and benefit from”.
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THE ONE WHO DID NOT ASK
A book titled, The One Who Did Not Ask is the English translation of Altaf Fatima’s Urdu novel Dastak Na Do by Rukhsana Ahmad. It was launched in a weekly session of Writers and Readers Cafe at the Arts Council on Thursday evening.
Dr. Tanveer Anjum, who moderated the event, introduced the author and guest speakers to the audience.
She said Ms. Ahmad was a novelist, short story writer and playwright. The first book that she read penned by her was The Hope Chest. And it was in 1993 that The One Who Did Not Ask was first published.
Durdana Soomro was the first speaker at the launch who shed light on the quality of the translated work. She said it is a smoothly translated book, very easy to read. It’s been translated effortlessly. Contrary to what people think, an effortless translation requires more hard work. It’s a simple story that has a female protagonist named Gaiti. She is a rebel. In the simplicity of the story, there are a lot of themes, such as feminism and alienation. It focuses on family relationships with a large number of characters.
The author of the book, Rukhsana Ahmad said one of the reasons for translating the novel was that she found its female protagonist, Gaiti, quite interesting. She is a lively character. Her mother is repressive and wants to control the girls [in the family]. The other aspect of Altaf Fatima’s work was its readability. I found it unputdownable. She tells the story so beautifully and goes with its pace. Then it’s written in a philosophical style. There’s a Chinese character in the story and the protagonist thinks about why two civilizations (China and the subcontinent) are different. This was also what I found intriguing. I didn’t know anything about Lao-Tzu. I have a friend who introduced me to a lot of this stuff. Altaf Fatima has thought deeply about all these things. Apart from that, there’s a contrast between the two sisters, one is compliant and the other is rebellious.
Ms. Ahmad said a critic while praising her translation complained about the plethora of characters (relatives) in the novel. English novels are so much about the individual, unlike their Urdu counterparts, she argued.
Dr. Omair Ahmed Khan said that Dastak Na Do was published in 1965. One of the important works of Altaf Fatima is the translation of Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird. There are traces (aasaar) of that novel in Dastak Na Do. She carried the same melancholic tone when she wrote her book. The translation as a previous speaker said is effortless. Altaf Fatima’s theme is based on Lao-Tzu’s famous philosophy that you don’t have to knock on doors to ask for good things. While translating it, Ms Ahmad, rather than going for the literal meaning of the Urdu title, went for the philosophy.
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THE RITUAL OF ELECTIONS IN PAKISTAN (1970-2018)
Writing on the eve of Pakistan’s twelfth general election scheduled for February 2024, the author narrates, analyzes, and reflects on all the eleven general elections that have preceded it. The narrative is an easy-flowing blend of history and empirical data. The book provides user-friendly access to the Gallup & Gilani Index of Electoral Record which is a carefully crafted data set constituting the voting history of the nearly three hundred million Pakistanis who have ever turned up to vote since 1970. In addition, the book provides access to a Gallup + Gilani compiled census of Pakistan’s political class. The census lists and informs on the size of the vote banks and the party affiliations of more than 8,000 members of this class who contested an election to the National Assembly since 2002.
Going beyond objective data and historical facts, the author reflects on why elections alone do not deliver democracy and good government. He proposes to restructure Pakistan’s electoral geography by creating 40 sub-provinces as the new platforms of political power and authority. The author’s prognosis is that Pakistan’s current political crisis has been sparked by the unmet power-sharing aspirations of a new political class. He believes they deserve to be listened to and provided with new and numerous platforms of political authority as the existing ones are too few and already overcrowded by the deserving and the undeserving. -
THE PATH I MADE
The Path I Made: A Memoir records the extraordinary journey of Dr Tasnim Ahsan culminating in her role of the first female Director of Pakistan’s largest state hospital, JPMC. Narrated against the backdrop of Partition, the fall of Dacca and of the binding power of family and friends, it is also the story of the spirit of the Pakistani nation. Prof. Durriya Kazi, educationist and artist Being a woman in a Pakistani society is never easy. With crippling honesty, Dr Tasnim Ahsan takes her readers on a personal, at times painful journey sharing the highs and lows of her personal and professional life. But it is a life well lived, never the lesson her own terms with grace and gravitas, while balancing relationships. Zofeen T Ebrahim, journalist
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UNDER SUCH A SHELTERING SKY
The year is 1971. After decades of military rule, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and his Awami League had won a landslide victory in the first election based on universal franchise in Pakistan. But the euphoria is short-lived. Instead of handing over power to the winner, the military regime cracks down on the Eastern wing of the country to crush the movement for the liberation of Bangladesh. A brutal conflict follows pitting West against East, turning neighbours against each other, dividing friends and families and igniting war between India and Pakistan. Two young men find themselves caught up in the tumultuous events of that year on opposite sides of the war. One is battling to preserve the unity of Pakistan, the other is fighting for an independent Bangladesh. Their paths cross in unpredictable ways in the chaos of war. As first one side and then the other gains the upper hand, at critical moments each man would hold the other’s life in his hands. What would they do? And what are the consequences of the choices they make?
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THE FIRST CELL
With the fascinating scholarship of The Emperor of All Maladies and the deeply personal experience of When Breath Becomes Air, a world-class oncologist examines the current state of cancer and its devastating impact on the individuals it affects — including herself.
In The First Cell, Azra Raza offers a searing account of how both medicine and our society (mis)treats cancer, how we can do better, and why we must. A lyrical journey from hope to despair and back again, The First Cell explores cancer from every angle: medical, scientific, cultural, and personal. Indeed, Raza describes how she bore the terrible burden of being her own husband’s oncologist as he succumbed to leukemia. Like When Breath Becomes Air, The First Cell is no ordinary book of medicine, but a book of wisdom and grace by an author who has devoted her life to making the unbearable easier to bear.
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THE LADY OF SOHANBELA
The principal character, Kamila, is the sole heir to the hereditary seat of a Sufi Saint located in a riverine area in the rural hinterland of Pakistan. Her liberal outlook and lifestyle are the outcomes of an urban upbringing and Westernized academics. The final wish of her long-suffering mother that she observe familial duties by maintaining and upholding the centuries-old family shrine that has a subcontinental following, requires Kamila to marry the leading landowner of the region. The tensions and conflicts inherent in such a situation are the well-springs of the narrative which plays out against European, American, and Pakistani backdrops.
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BALOCHISTAN
Balochistan has been facing innumerable challenges since Pakistan?s independence. Resentment and socio-political turmoil in Baloch society have been feuled by the federation?s denial of Balochistan?s rightful share of resources and funds: a recognition of this injustice by the state has long been needed. Fida Hussain Malik’s book is a seminal work providing deep insights into the issues of Balochistan. It will help create a deeper understanding and promote a well-integrated Federation-Province relationship.
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PEARLS AND SHARDS
“Iftikhar Malik’s Pearls and Shards seeks to redefine the genre by bringing together multiple campuses from various continents. Malik’s novel is not about financial constraints; he weaves together characters that belong to diverse backgrounds and are brought together by the campus which is as material as it is symbolic. Saleem Awan, the protagonist, moves around various campus worlds which are multicultural and multi-dimensional. He is a child of local and historical cultures, and his independent mind does not allow him to settle down in one place and [form a lasting] relationship because his universal personality would not afford him a single identity. After watching various actions on campuses across the continents, the reader realizes that there may not be a line of demarcation between the campus and the world ‘out there’. A relationship is perhaps the greatest asset one can possess, at the same time, it is a delicate balance that can come apart unless cherished and protected. Pearls and Shards is a unique work in its ambition and scope. It certainly has set new standards in the genre.” Abbas Zaidi, Sydney, Academic at the University of New South Wales; author of ‘The Infidels of Mecca’.
“In Pearls and Shards, Iftikhar Malik, a distinguished academic, creates a rich, vivid tale that moves between the first and third-person narratives of a Pakistani scholar, Saleem, and his two American colleagues Natasha and Nadine. Spanning family relationships, personal friendships, and university life in Pakistan, Britain, America, and Japan, the novel makes an important comment on today’s universalism through personal encounters, the exchange of ideas, and the engagement with significant texts, alongside issues of identity and belonging.” Muneeza Shamsie, author of ‘Hybrid Tapestries’ and editor of ‘A Dragonfly in the Sun’.
“An extraordinarily wide-ranging novel that takes us from Pakistan to Britain to the US to Japan. Pearls and Shards offer remarkable insight into lives that traverse cultures.” Gavin Cologne-Brookes, Lacock & Paris: Professor-Emeritus at Bath Spa University; author of `American Lonesome: The Work of Bruce Springsteen’. -
IN THE LAND OF THE PURE
In the Land of the Pure is a geopolitical thriller set in Pakistan, the only Muslim country to possess an atomic bomb which worries the Western governments and secret services. Could one of the terrorist groups in the country use it to threaten the world at large? Anne le Guennec, a French woman reporter is sent to investigate these strategic questions. She discovers a beautiful and complex country quite different from the image it has outside. Alongside feudalism and obscurantism, she finds the country to be modern and sophisticated with its art galleries, theatres, fashion shows and cafes. Not exactly the black hole populated by bearded men and veiled women that is portrayed to the world. She also discovers the ‘great game’ of the 21st century a muffled yet ferocious conflict between the United States and China for supremacy in this region at the crossroads of the principal petroleum routes and rich in rare metals. During her investigations, Anne meets colourful characters an intrepid old begum, a dancer and activist for women’s rights and also Karim, an ambiguous theatre man who fascinates her. But while she seeks to penetrate fundamentalist groups and obtain an interview with a leader, she falls into a death trap. Will the mysterious Karim be able to save her? Karim who loves Pakistan madly and keeps a dangerous secret.
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HONOUR-BOUND TO PAKISTAN IN DUTY, DESTINY & DEATH
For various reasons, Iskander Mirza’s memoirs have not been published in book form. After more than half a century, they are being published in their totality. The memoirs lay open the facts for the people of Pakistan, historians, and academics to judge the man who was a trusted lieutenant of Quaid-e-Azam and, while in the Indian Political Service, secretly worked with Jinnah (who fully recognized the invaluable potential in the young Deputy Commissioner of Peshawar) towards the most challenging task of achieving Pakistan from the British.
In all fairness, General Ayub may not have been behind it all but the sycophants were in a stampede outdoing each other in casting aspersions on Iskander Mirza’s financial propriety, integrity, and character. Such was the national atmosphere that structured the average Pakistani’s mindset for their first President. It will be a miracle if this book, if not changed, can at least initiate a debate on historical distortions, disinformation, and withholding of important documented accounts that may not have gone down well with the sitting government of the time to suit a certain ideology or, more dangerously, the planting of fake information to serve ulterior agendas.
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FACE TO FACE WITH BENAZIR
The story begins in 1986 when Benazir Bhutto returned home to lead her party’s struggle against the military dictatorship of General Zia ul-Haq, and ends in her tragic assassination in 2007. Zahid Hussain enjoyed a long association with Benazir Bhutto as a journalist and got the rare opportunity to observe her political journey up close. Face to Face with Benazir is a compilation of interviews of Benazir Bhutto by Zahid Hussain published in the Herald and Newsline magazines from 1986 to 2002. They provide rare insights into Benazir’s thoughts and struggles during her tumultuous life.
Author: Zahid Hussain
ISBN: 9789697162574
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SECOND COMING
A tour de force, Second Coming, first novel by the author explores the sacred and the profane in the life of the protagonist. The multi-layered narrative is seen through his eyes which both colour it, and expose him. It cuts across several countries and cultures, belief systems and social structures, ages and genders. The novel deftly weaves literary and religious allusions and illusions into an absorbing, complex portrayal. A cosmopolitan childhood, challenging and successful middle age and the onset of infirmities of ageing contribute to the unusual manipulation of the time frame. The past, present and future, of a sensitive individual prone to doubt and hope, vulnerability and sureness, are laid candidly bare. It is a story studded with comic moments of self-delusion, folly and the ridiculous. Here, viewed from telling, faceted perspectives, is the human condition.
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FROM MY WOUNDED HEART WITH LOVE
An open and honest personal narrative on love, amputated breasts, cancer and the loss of a loved one. An empathetic translation of Anja Caspary s book, From My Wounded Heart With Love relates Caspary’s story of navigating the consequences of losing her husband to illness just when she had beaten cancer. Claudia Arnold has done a remarkable job in not only translating the German text but she has also retained every bit of pathos and hope present in Caspary s moving account. Nadeem F. Paracha, Author. Beautifully and poignantly written, Anja Caspary’s From My Wounded Heart With Love chronicles her extraordinary journey as she battles the challenges and torments of cancer. She explores how disease transforms our relationship to the world around us and exquisitely reframes our assumptions about encounters with adversity. Caspary invites the reader into her life through an unvarnished window of intimacy and candor. With evocative language and imagery, she draws out powerful emotions from her experiences, traversing the themes of loss and failure, womanhood, love and fortitude with elegance and force. Translator Claudia Arnold deftly navigates literary and cultural nuances between German and English. She captures the unpredictable rhythms of this brave journey with remarkable linguistic clarity. A work of two masterful artists, this novel brings strength and insight to those who face cancer and those who stand by their side as they do. Naila Mahmood, visual artist, photographer, writer and educator. Anja Caspary tells the uplifting, courageous and inspiring story of how she successfully confronted breast cancer juxtaposed with the compelling story of her love, marriage and the tragic loss of her beloved husband, Hagen. Her journey as a cancer survivor is described with sensitivity covering every phase from diagnosis to fear, confusion, depression, decision-making, treatment and cure. This is not a medical book but a story of love and relationships, an eye-opening, poignant and triumphant tale told with courage, hope and spirituality. The translator, Claudia Arnold, has presented the book in its every nuance in beautiful prose befitting the moving story and conveying succinctly the mood and feelings of the author. She has equal mastery over both German and English. Azra Raza, M.D., Chan Soon-Shiong Professor of Medicine, Director, MDS Center, Columbia University Medical Center, New York.
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BIOETHICS IN PAKISTAN
This is a well researched well-articulated and locally relevant casebook that provides a unique lens essential to finding tangible solutions to pressing ethical issue prevalent in our setting and generating further discourse on ethics in healthcare
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SOCIAL AND POLITICAL CONCERNS IN PAKISTAN AND INDIA
Aside from a shared history and culture, there are many contemporary political and social issues that are common to Pakistan and India the answers to which shall have an indelible impact on the future of the subcontinent. In such a landscape, it is a matter of concern that there is so little exchange of opinion on these issues leading to a widening gulf of misperceptions and misunderstandings. The essays compiled in the book aim to bridge that gap and, at the same time, provide an opportunity for critical reflection on shared aspects of our past, present and future.
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1946 THE LAST WAR OF INDEPENDENCE
Pramod Kapoor’s compelling narrative of the Royal Indian Navy uprising of February 1946 in Mumbai and Karachi meticulously researches the seven-day face-off between the naval mutineers, a divided press and an impassioned public opinion, ranged on the one side and the colonial government and the all India nationalist political parties on the other, in a nail-biting, blow by blow account that, in all probability, accelerated the departure of the British from India. What followed was a conspiracy of silence hatched between understandably nervous post-colonial military establishments and Independence historians on both sides of the border, and the creation of a cast-iron taboo that has survived to this present day. Kapoor has unveiled a hidden chapter of our shared history for which he is to be warmly congratulated.