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With acclaimed Pakistani novelist Kamila Shamsie’s novel, Home Fire, earning a place on the Man Booker Longlist this year, the focus is once again on Pakistani writers.
And while Shamsie was lucky to have found the necessary encouragement for her literary pursuits in her family and publisher, others in her country have not been quite so lucky – one of the reasons that they look at booming literary markets like India.
Says Anam Zakaria, whose debut non-fiction, The Footprints of Partition, was an out an out success:
Renuka Chatterjee, Vice President – Publishing, Speaking Tiger, who has published Invitation by Shehryar Fazli, and more recently, A Season for Martyrs by Bina Shah, explains why Indian publishing houses are so open to submissions from across the border –
And while the literary success of writers like Mohsin Hamid, Uzma Aslam Khan, Hanif Kureishi and many more, in the past few years has only served to whet the appetite of publishers, there is no dearth of good writing talent in Pakistan, if South Asia’s top literary agent, Kanishka Gupta, is to be believed.
Gupta’s list currently includes 33 well-known and upcoming writers from Pakistan, with many more being represented by other Indian literary agencies like Red Ink and Siyahi.
So, even though the two countries are forever sparring on the borders, there is much more collaboration happening in the publishing industry with readers more than willing to accept Pakistani writers. The reasons – according to Gupta – are not difficult to understand:
However, even as their reader base continues to grow in India and beyond, there is not much change in the themes that most Pakistani writers dish out. Are they scared of experimenting, I wonder?
Sabyn Javeri whose political thriller, Nobody Killed Her, has been making waves for some time now, offers an answer –
She reminds how her own novel looks at gender parity and class through women in politics.
Chatterjee of Speaking Tiger seconds Javeri’s opinion –
Zakaria, on her part, does not fail to remind me of how Urdu and regional literature has always been very promising in Pakistan. “(In addition to that) literary festivals are providing additional platforms to readers and writers to share new ideas.”
But are the publishers interested in these “new ideas”?
In India – yes.
In Pakistan – apparently not – for almost all the Pakistani writers I talked to had very “disappointing” starts. Shandana Minhas, acclaimed author of three novels, including Tunnel Vision, discloses how logistical problems plaguing Pakistani publishing industry complicates things for local writers.
However, not all hope is lost, and unlike others, Minhas continues to remain optimistic, having recently started her own publishing house, Mongrel Books – “so that other Pakistani writers whose work might not find traction on more commercial grounds have options.”
And the moment she tells me that, I know a lot of writers are listening.
(Vani has worked as a business journalist and is the author of ‘The Recession Groom’. She can be reached @Vani_Author)
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