Bapsi Sidhwa

The Pakistani Bride

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A Pakistani teenager is trapped by tradition in this tale by “Pakistan’s finest English-language novelist” (New York Times).
Wild, austere, and magnificently beautiful, the territories of northern Pakistan are a forbidding place, particularly for women. Traveling alone from the isolated mountain village where he was born, Qasim, a tribal man, takes Zaitoon, an orphaned girl, for his daughter and brings her to the glittering city of Lahore. Amid the pungent bazaars and crowded streets, he makes his fortune and a home for the two of them.
Yet as the years pass, Qasim grows nostalgic for his life in the mountains, and fifteen-year-old Zaitoon envisions a romantic landscape, filled with tall men who roam the mountains like gods. Impulsively, Qasim promises Zaitoon in marriage to a man of his tribe. But once she arrives in the mountains, the ancient customs of unquestioning obedience and backbreaking work make accepting her fate as the bride of an inscrutable husband impossible. Unfortunately, the only escape is one from which there is no return.
Prescient and provocative in its assessment of the plight of women in a tribal society in Pakistan, the first of Bapsi Sidhwa’s novels is a story of marriage and commitment, of the conflict between adherence to tradition and indomitable force of a woman’s spirit.
Praise for The Pakistani Bride
“At a breathless pace [Sidhwa] weaves her exotic cliffhanger from passion, power, lust, sensuality, cruelty and murder.” —Financial Times (UK)
“Bapsi Sidhwa is a powerful and dramatic novelist who knows how to flesh out a story.” —London Times (UK)
“Sidhwa writes with the same vivacity that made the author’s first novel, The Crow Eaters so memorable.” —Telegraph (UK)
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256 printed pages
Original publication
2012
Publication year
2012
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Quotes

  • محمدhas quoted2 days ago
    Years slipped by. Qasim, nostalgic for the cool mountains, wove such fascination into reminiscences of his life among them that Zaitoon longed to see what she considered her native land. Her young, romantic imagination flowered into fantasies of a region where men were heroic, proud, and incorruptible, ruled by a code of honor that banned all injustice and evil. These men, tall and light-skinned, were gods—free to roam the mountains as their fancies led. Their women, beautiful as houris, and their bright, rosy-cheeked children, lived beside crystal torrents of melted snow.
  • محمدhas quoted6 days ago
    On the fourth evening of their target’s visit, Qasim, deprived of action and tense with private misgiving, decided to console himself with a trip to the brothel streets of Hira Mandi. He enjoyed the narrow lanes streaming with men, and the tall, rickety buildings leaning towards each other. He could stroll in these lanes for hours, his senses throbbing . . . the heady smell of perfume, the tinkle of payals on dancers’ ankles, the chhum-chhum of feminine feet dancing behind closed doors excited him. He watched the gaudily dressed, heavily made-up girls lolling on carpets, leaning on bolsters, chatting with each other and with their musicians. Doors flung wide open showed harmoniums and tables waiting to entertain.
    The girls smiled their invitations boldly. Qasim knew he had only to step up with money and the doors would close about him, shutting off the street, intriguing passersby with the sound of music and the tinkle of ankle-bells. He would be inside relishing their charms and dances.
    Occasional seekh-kabab and sweetmeat stores brought a pleasing touch of reality to the incandescent mirage of the area. The men jostled each other, eyes peering behind arching doorways as they looked at the girls leaning from balconies. And from the structures cocooning the girls pulsated the melody of verses sung to the pleading, sweet, high pitch of a shehnai—and with the merry twirl of belled feet throbbing
  • محمدhas quoted7 days ago
    gradually edged out Bentleys and Morrises and, the seductively swaggering American Agency for International Development (A.I.D.), the last sedate vestiges of the British East India Company

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