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  Browse Subject:  Fiction
Five Queen’s Road: (The Pakistan Selection)
By Sorayya Khan
 
 
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‘Dina Lal wasn’t moving . . . Hindu or not, he wasn’t, goddamnit, going anywhere.’ 

Lahore, 1947. Dina Lal, a true-blue Lahori, refuses to leave, staying put in Five Queen’s Road, a house he bought, in spite of his wife’s greatest misgivings, from an Englishman who was deeply reluctant to part with it. To insulate his family from the mayhem on the streets, Dina Lal converts to Islam and as added protection invites Amir Shah, a Muslim colleague, and his children, Javid and Rubina, to share the house with him. But the events that unfold over the next few months make a mockery of Dina Lal’s plans. While Dina Lal and Amir Shah cross swords with each other at every given opportunity—though unexpectedly and in spite of themselves rushing to the other’s defence in moments of crisis—a furtive friendship blossoms between Dina Lal and Javid.
 
Ten years later Javid’s European wife, Irene, still struggling with her World War II memories, joins the tumultuous household. Inexplicably, the lines of the house are redrawn, and the new border is no less arbitrary and contentious than the one that sundered the subcontinent.  While the house is steadily encroached upon by a car shop settlement and a sweepers’ colony, the occupants’ long-standing feud reaches new heights. But the family sees an unexpected alliance develop and loyalties, to person and nation, are scrutinized.
 
In this stunning novel that weaves family saga and national history, Sorayya Khan writes deftly of characters who battle memories and each other alike.
Book Reviews
‘Five Queen’s Road captures an important fragment of post-Partition history by resurrecting the stories of a defiant Hindu family that stayed behind in Lahore and intertwining it with that of a Muslim family who became their tenants. Richly layered, eminently readable, the narrative unfolds with a poignancy and veracity that will haunt the reader as it did me.’—Bapsi Sidhwa

‘Sorayya Khan’s work has always been permeated with themes of interconnectedness and she explores this further in her moving, multi-layered novel Five Queen’s Road. In a tight, elegant prose, she creates a microcosm of the world by intertwining, across three decades, the story of a colonial Englishman’s one-time house in Lahore and its diverse, post-Partition inhabitants in new-born Pakistan. Her plot links up, skilfully, the traumatic memories of Partition in Lahore with World War II in Holland, through the lives of Amir Khan, a Muslim lawyer, Irene his Dutch daughter-in-law and Dina Lal, the Lahore-born Hindu, who owns the house and shares it with them. The intricate, complex relationships between the characters reflect that of nations and also explore notions of belonging and nationhood as well as the adaptation, migration and mutation, following the violence and political upheavals of the 1940s. These changes are underpinned by Irene’s first meeting with her future husband, Javed, Amir Khan’s son and Dina Lal’s protégé, in the United States—a land of migrants and new beginnings.’—Muneeza Shamsie
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Published by : Penguin Books India
Published :  15-Oct-2009
Imprint : Penguin
ISBN : 9780143064183
Edition : Paperback
Format : B
Extent : 224pp
Classification :
Rights : India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan only
Cover Price :  0
 
 

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