author of Booklust
- Nancy Pearl
"This novel is about mothers and daughters, life in a repressive society, and falling in love. Gorgeously written."
Cleveland Plain Dealer
"Admirable. [And] Aasmaani's voice - shifting from anger to vulnerability - drives the intriguing story."
Bust
"Broken Verses isn't just well-written, it's practically poetry. A before-bed-in-front-of-the-fire-with-your-favorite-cup-of-tea read."
The Independent
"A gripping read."
Entertainment Weekly
"A fresh literary look at modern-day Pakistan. [A] sparse, at times beautiful meditation on love, forgiveness, and letting go. B+."
curledup.com
"Broken Verses speaks to the power of words in an age of repression, played against the turbulent history of Pakistan."
Booklist
"Shamsie carries the reader along on Aasmaani's slow journey of discovery with magnetic and beguiling prose, intelligence and wit."
The Odyssey Bookshop
- Herman Fong
"An utterly riveting tale. Shamsie has created one of the most compelling characters to appear in recent fiction."
Publishers Weekly
"Turbulent Karachi is the backdrop for this intriguing, shimmeringly intelligent fourth novel with its wry, fetching, captivating, and unexpected heroine."
School Library Journal
"Shamsie's love for and knowledge of the people of today's Karachi shine through this compelling tale."
Kirkus
"[The main character] herself is this strong novel's greatest strength. She's a remarkable narrator, in a thoroughly captivating tale." βstarred
Library Journal
"A beautifully written tale that is equal parts A.S. Byatt-style mystery and mother-daughter saga. [D]eftly infused with humor and romance."
Library Journal
Aasmaani Akram has landed a job as a quiz show research assistant for the first independent television station in Karachi, Pakistan, shortly before the heralded return of Shehnaz Saeed, a legendary actress set to star in a station soap opera. Shehnaz was a close friend of 30-year-old Aasmaani's feminist icon mother, Samina, missing and presumed dead for the last 14 years. Aasmaani's father, Pakistan's greatest modern poet, disappeared just two years before Samina. Their outspoken activism meant long periods of parental absence for their daughter and fostered an air of cynicism and distrust. But when Shehnaz gives Aasmaani a series of coded letters ostensibly written by her parents, Aasmaani investigates her troubled past and faces the possibility that her parents may, in fact, be alive and imprisoned. Four-time novelist Shamsie (Kartography) offers a beautifully written tale that is equal parts A.S. Byatt-style mystery and mother-daughter saga peopled with strong, engaging characters and deftly infused with humor and romance. The political realities of a post-9/11 Pakistan add another compelling dimension to the universal themes of familial, artistic, and political responsibility. Recommended for larger public libraries and those desiring to amass a collection of international authors.-Jenn B. Stidham, Houston Community Coll. Northeast Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
School Library Journal
Adult/High School-Growing up in Pakistan, Aasmaani Inqalab, 31, was no stranger to government corruption and intrigue. Her heroes were her mother, an outspoken activist, and her mother's lover, a poet known for his criticism of bureaucracy. Far from a stable influence, though, the couple had a pattern of disappearing into exile when the government drew too close and reappearing months or years later. When she was a teen, the Poet was beaten to death, and her mother vanished shortly afterward. Aasmaani assumed that this disappearance was like all the others, and that her mother would reappear without apology one day. But when she begins receiving coded messages that suggest that the Poet's death was staged as part of a government plot, she is drawn into a web of intrigue in which her own life may be in danger. Her mother's closest friend resurfaces, and Aasmaani must decide whether Shehnaz and her son are truly looking out for her well-being or have ulterior motives. The story skillfully combines political intrigue with family dynamics. Characters are beautifully drawn, especially Aasmaani, whose inability to get beyond her abandonment has left deep scars. Shamsie's love for and knowledge of the people of today's Karachi shine through this compelling tale.-Kim Dare, Fairfax County Public Library System, VA Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
In a Karachi-set fourth novel, Shamsie (Kartography, 2003, etc.) explores universal themes. At age 30, Aasmaani Inqalab finds herself taking a job at a Pakistani TV station, where she meets Shehnaz Saeed, famed actress who is returning to the spotlight after years of retirement. Shehnaz also happened to be an old, close friend of Aasmaani's mother. Aasmaani's family tree is complicated. Her parents were married for less than a year, her activist mother was in love with a famous Pakistani poet, and Aasmaani was raised by four parents-mum, dad, stepmother and the Poet. But then the Poet died, and Aasmaani's mother disappeared. And now, 14 years later, Shehnaz waltzes into Aasmaani's life, bearing strange letters in some sort of code. She has received these letters from a nameless fan, and, remembering that Aasmaani's mother and the Poet corresponded in code, she passes the notes to Aasmaani. Could these mysterious messages contain clues that would explain Aasmaani's mother's disappearance, or the Poet's death? Aasmaani, who remembers the code from childhood, translates the letters and becomes convinced that the supposedly dead Poet is writing them. Thus the heart-pumping plotline. Has the Poet really been held captive these many years? And what happened to Aasmaani's mother? But intrigue isn't the only trick Shamsie has up her sleeve. This is also a story about parents and children, about Aasmaani trying to make peace with her strange childhood. It is a story about love, as Aasmaani and Shehnaz's son find themselves drawn to each other. And there's politics, to boot. The political backdrop-criticism of America, anxiety about the role of fundamentalists in Pakistani government-remains justthat, a backdrop; it never overshadows, but rather somehow expands, the story. Aasmaani herself is this strong novel's greatest strength. She's a remarkable narrator, in a thoroughly captivating tale. Author tour