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  • 424 Seiten
  • 15 Lesestunden

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A landmark Urdu classic translated for the first time. Khalid Jawed is one of the most original and extraordinary writers in Urdu today. The Paradise of Food is an Urdu classic known for its radical, experimental form and savage and dark honesty. It tells the story of a middle-class Muslim joint family over a span of fifty years. As India – and Islamic culture – hardens, the narrator, whose life we follow from boyhood to old age, struggles to find a place for himself, at odds in his home and in the world outside. But to describe the novel in its plot is to do its originality no justice. In this profoundly daring work – tense, mysterious, even unfathomable on occasion – Jawed builds an atmosphere of gloom and grotesqueness to draw out his themes. And in doing so he penetrates deep into the dark heart of middle-class Muslims today. Superbly translated, The Paradise of Food is a novel like no other.

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The Paradise of Food, M. Khalid Jawed, Alyssa Novelia, Oliver M. O'Reilly

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
2022
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(Hardcover)
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Titel
The Paradise of Food
Sprache
Englisch
Erscheinungsdatum
2022
Einband
Hardcover
Seitenzahl
424
ISBN10
9391165648
ISBN13
9789391165642
Reihe
Schlagwörter
Belletristik
Bewertung
3,55 von 5 Sternen
Beschreibung
A landmark Urdu classic translated for the first time. Khalid Jawed is one of the most original and extraordinary writers in Urdu today. The Paradise of Food is an Urdu classic known for its radical, experimental form and savage and dark honesty. It tells the story of a middle-class Muslim joint family over a span of fifty years. As India – and Islamic culture – hardens, the narrator, whose life we follow from boyhood to old age, struggles to find a place for himself, at odds in his home and in the world outside. But to describe the novel in its plot is to do its originality no justice. In this profoundly daring work – tense, mysterious, even unfathomable on occasion – Jawed builds an atmosphere of gloom and grotesqueness to draw out his themes. And in doing so he penetrates deep into the dark heart of middle-class Muslims today. Superbly translated, The Paradise of Food is a novel like no other.